This blog is now closedAuction clearance rate slumps to 57% nationwide as

This blog is now closedAuction clearance rate slumps to 57% nationwide as interest rate hikes prompt Australians to sellGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastBarnaby Joyce calls for fuel rationing, saying a ‘plan is better than panic’One Nation MP Barnaby Joyce who yesterday…

This blog is now closedAuction clearance rate slumps to 57% nationwide as
This blog is now closedAuction clearance rate slumps to 57% nationwide as Photo: The Guardian

What we learned, Thursday 26 March
And with that, we are going to put the blog to bed.

Before we go, let’s recap the day’s big headlines.

Australia condemned Iran’s indiscriminate attacks on Gulf states and Jordan, joining with many other like-minded nations at an urgent debate at the United Nations .

Tropical Cyclone Narelle intensified , threatening Western Australia’s Kimberley coast after wreaking havoc across northern Queensland and the Northern Territory since last week.

Fuel was the big political topic again today.

The shadow defence minister, James Paterson , said the government has the power to trigger the Liquid Fuel Security Act, which would allow the government to require fuel suppliers and companies to provide more detailed information on exactly where fuel is going and where there are shortages.

In NSW, Chris Minns , said his government will use “extraordinary powers” against fuel companies if they are unlawfully blocking independent retailers from purchasing fuel.

And Liberal frontbencher Andrew Hastie said he is open to a new 25% tax on soaring gas profits as part of a Scandinavian-style sovereign wealth fund to strengthen the federal budget amid the global energy crisis.

The Reserve Bank’s assistant governor, Chris Kent , said soaring fuel prices will “make us all poorer”, but that the central bank was focused on making sure the initial energy shock did not lead to “extended inflationary pressures”.

The government backed giving 2.7 million workers an above-inflation boost to their wages to help workers cope with the soaring cost of fuel.

Unions are arguing for a 5% rise in the minimum wage from July, in line with where many economists predict inflation will reach as the global energy shock delivers another cost-of-living blow to households.

Thank you for spending part of your day with us.

We will be back tomorrow to do it all again.

Source: This article was originally published by The Guardian

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