Weeks away from a federal election, Treasurer Jim Chalmers hands down his fourth budget, saying it is aimed at helping with the cost of living while the Australian economy is ‘turning the corner’. The budget includes tax and energy bill relief, a cap on the price of medicine and a boost to Medicare. After overseeing back-to-back surpluses thanks to booming commodity prices and a strong labour market, the budget will return to deficit this year and for the foreseeable futureWhat the budget means for your generation – gen Z, millennial, gen X or boomerFederal budget 2025: Labor bets big with $17.1bn in tax cuts to win over middle AustraliaBudget 2025: Chalmers spruiks a ‘modest but meaningful’ $5 a week in a budget that puts Dutton in a pickle Continue reading…Weeks away from a federal election, Treasurer Jim Chalmers hands down his fourth budget, saying it is aimed at helping with the cost of living while the Australian economy is ‘turning the corner’. The budget includes tax and energy bill relief, a cap on the price of medicine and a boost to Medicare. After overseeing back-to-back surpluses thanks to booming commodity prices and a strong labour market, the budget will return to deficit this year and for the foreseeable futureWhat the budget means for your generation – gen Z, millennial, gen X or boomerFederal budget 2025: Labor bets big with $17.1bn in tax cuts to win over middle AustraliaBudget 2025: Chalmers spruiks a ‘modest but meaningful’ $5 a week in a budget that puts Dutton in a pickle Continue reading… Federal budget 2025: Chalmers delivers speech spruiking tax cuts and energy relief – video | Australian budget 2025 | The Guardian
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Weeks away from a federal election, Treasurer Jim Chalmers hands down his fourth budget, saying it is aimed at helping with the cost of living while the Australian economy is ‘turning the corner’. The budget includes tax and energy bill relief, a cap on the price of medicine and a boost to Medicare. After overseeing back-to-back surpluses thanks to booming commodity prices and a strong labour market, the budget will return to deficit this year and for the foreseeable future
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