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COVID inquiry

November

Then NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian and Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant at one of their daily press conferences during the pandemic.

How to avoid harsh lockdowns in the next pandemic

Politicians were the information gatekeepers in Australia during the economically crippling lockdowns of 2021, but scientists have a better idea.

  • Michael Smith

October

Second coming: people wonder why

Without trust, our institutions lose authority. Just ask Trump

In 2016 Donald Trump stormed into office on the back of a widespread voter cynicism and distrust. He is a coin toss away from doing so again.

  • Phillip Coorey
Former Victorian premier Daniel Andrews has been appointed chairman of Melbourne-based youth mental health research body Orygen.

COVID-19 bullies could get away with it again

During the pandemic, few Australians were brave enough to say “stop”. We can hope for a different future, but there’s no sign things will be different next time.

  • John Roskam
The authoritarianism extended to overreach such as bans on public gatherings that saw police order people sitting alone on beaches to ‘disperse’.

Don’t suppress democracy in a pandemic

Not even a public health crisis should justify suppression of the normal rules of democratic debate about government actions and policy alternatives.

  • The AFR View
The US Centers for Disease Contol rapidly became politicised.

The danger of COVID zealots has not passed

The proposed new Australian Centre for Disease Control is open to the same ideological capture that plagued its US counterpart.

  • Nick Coatsworth
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Former federal health minister Greg Hunt.

Ex-health minister backs COVID inquiry’s criticism of the states

Greg Hunt said the findings echoed his own concerns over the unilateral actions of the premiers, and notes more people had died from the virus since Labor was elected.

  • Phillip Coorey

Good policy was good politics – until COVID came along

Mercifully the authors of the pandemic inquiry report have sidestepped the terms of reference and called out the behaviour of the states.

  • Phillip Coorey

Heavy-handed COVID restrictions have destroyed trust in government

Many of the measures taken during COVID‑19 are unlikely to be accepted by the population again, due to the lack of trust created by the heavy-handed response.

  • Updated
  • Phillip Coorey and Tom McIlroy
Up and down: The post-HomeBuilder level for home-building isn’t clear.

Pandemic HomeBuilder response fuelled inflation and housing shortage

Most of the $2.6 billion stimulus during the COVID-19 pandemic was spent on renovations, not building new homes, an inquiry has found.

  • John Kehoe

Overall, Australia’s COVID management was a huge success

Where we succeeded, it was the result of good institutions and good decision-making. But that’s not to say we didn’t stumble.

  • Steven Hamilton and Richard Holden
Root-and-branch reform is the only way to restore the trust that has been lost in our institutions’ ability to provide for and serve Australia’s people.

Inquiry whitewashes the colossal mismanagement

The authors of the report are oblivious to the most fundamental big-picture cracks in our institutions revealed by the country’s Covid-19 response.

  • Gigi Foster

Six things Australia got wrong in the pandemic

The federal government’s expert review into Australia’s COVID-19 crisis response says future pandemics should be handled differently.

  • Tom McIlroy

We should never see such an old-school pandemic response again

At the next pandemic, Australia should focus on key risk groups and be driven by reliable official public data.

  • Tom Burton

April

Ansell shows how to create new interest in an old story

Cheap stock never goes out of fashion. The key for a company is to issue it only occasionally, and make the most of when it does.

  • Anthony Macdonald

January

Former deputy chief medical officer Nick Coatsworth has spoken about the inquiry into the pandemic response.

Controlling COVID ‘at all costs’ went too far: ex-deputy health chief

Officials persisted with policies despite the changing nature of the pandemic, while state powers on lockdowns need to be reined in, Dr Nick Coatsworth said.

  • John Kehoe
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November 2023

Former British PM Boris Johnson.

Boris Johnson ‘bamboozled’ by science, COVID-19 inquiry hears

The UK’s chief scientific adviser said Boris Johnson struggled to understand the advice of scientists during the COVID pandemic which killed 232,000 in the UK.

  • Pan Pylas
Earnings season won’t be easy for investors to interpret.

Banks sign off on healthcare group Healius’ long fall from grace

What happens after a strong founder leaves a company? This big healthcare group is a cautionary tale.

  • Anthony Macdonald
Former treasurer Josh Frydenberg and prime minister Scott Morrison

JobKeeper recipients hit by pay penalty, report finds

The Morrison government’s $89 billion JobKeeper wage subsidy went on for too long and tied workers to lower paying jobs, an independent review has found.

  • John Kehoe

October 2023

Federation Square sits deserted during Melbourne’s second wave lockdown in August 2020.

JobKeeper worked, but the bill is unpaid

The Albanese government has still not squared up to the fiscal policy challenges left by the pandemic.

  • The AFR View

September 2023

The Prime Minister is protecting Dan Andrews and the Labor brand as Victoria has the worst record of COVID deaths and infections of any Australian jurisdiction.

COVID-19 inquiry betrays all who worked hard to overcome the crisis

The Morrison government had Robo-debt as its shame. Will Albanese government’s greatest shame be failing to seek key lessons about to deal with the next pandemic?

  • Peter Strong