Support my research and projects: ko-fi.com/econyt Hi! Awesome people of the internet. -Comments and suggestions are welcome. -Please share videos with people who you think might enjoy this content. -Don't forget to subscribe for more economics content! You are awesome :)
hi! awesome content creator! just a quick suggestion: still listening to the video but the background music is a bit too loud.. maybe make it a bit softer so the narration doesn't have to compete with the music in our ears 🙈😇 loving the content, thank you!! 🇦🇺🪃
As an American living in Australia the past 10 years, I would say the lack of innovation etc isn't so much Australia being 'dumb', but more that there is just no economic incentive. Australia is a country of abundance where mediocrity thrives - people can live a very comfortable life here without being particularly exceptional, so why push yourself? Whereas in the US you really need to out-work and out-hustle others to have any chance of a half-decent life.
@@neznet that’s not true …you can get along by being mediocre in the US too. But if you’re skilled and capable, you get paid better in the US. In Australia if you’re better than the others then they’ll destroy you instead of rewarding you. For context, I’m an Aussie living in the US 😄
Investment into housing in Australia has also taken priority over investment into business. Housing has historically provided far better and reliable returns.
As a New Zealander that moved here 20 years ago Australia is a country of Mediocrity. The amount of times my peers have flouted the "She'll be right" "If it ain't broke don't fix it" Mantra really bottlenecks innovation. People here are comfortable and get paid quite well hence there's no drive such as countries like Singapore, The US, Vietnam, Nigeria and other developing countries are spearheading breakthrough innovations.
@@dumdumbrown4225100% mate I’ve got masters in Mech Engineering and honestly it feels like it’s just diminishing returns. You can literally get paid 120k as a stop sign holder. Why bother with all that hard sciency stuff when you can get 120k for twisting a fucking pole. Australia is a very basic economy that sells rocks for it’s wealth, nothing more. Thinking about getting an E3 Visa and moving to the US. Pay and opportunities are just incomparable. And yeah sounds like you know the tall poppy thing only too well.
Protecting your capital is much more important than making money. Basically because if you lose your capital, making money is much harder. ''Missing the train'' vs. ''losing your money''. There are a lot of trains, but if your money is gone, it's over.
Wall Street pitched so-called quality stocks with high profitability and low debt, as a kind of insurance against whatever the economy might throw at you. Quality stocks have underperformed the S&P500 this year, My $200k portfolio is down by approximately 20 %, any recommendations to scale up my returns on investment
Nobody knows anything You need to create your own process, manage risk and stick to the plan, through thick or thin While also continuously learning from mistakes and improving.
Exactly why i enjoy market decisions being guided by a pro , seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time both employing risk management and market experience , been using a portfolio-coach for over 2years+ and I've netted over $3million in that time frame.
When ‘Carol Vivian Constable’ is trading, there's no nonsense and no excuses. She wins the trade and you win. Take the loss, I promise she'll take one with you.
Australia is overly bureaucratic with high costs at every step of the process of establishing and running business, generally poor work ethic from the populace, conservative and afraid of risk, change and innovation, slow and inefficient. All this makes it uncompetitive. However, it is reliable and stable economically and socially.
I disagree with some statements in the first half of this video, but the second half is 100% correct. Australia is a wealthy country, mainly due to digging stuff out of the ground that we cannot even convert to a finished product; Australia is a highly educated country (lots of people with University degrees); but Australia is technologically almost a third world nation. We make almost no tech, we don't carry scientific research though to products we can sell, we import almost everything more complex than a tomato or cardboard box from Asia. The problem is that it is possibly to live an affluent and comfortable life in Australia after getting an easy degree (ie little science or maths), such as law, economics or commerce. You don't even need a degree to get rich; just become a tradesmen or a real estate agent. 80% of the Australian economy is housing. To get rich, you borrow as much money as you can and purchase as many investment products as possible. Why go out of your way to set up a high tech factory or do complicated and expensive medical research? Australia is heaven for rent-seeking capitalist. And hell for those of us who aren't.
@@theholypopechodeii4367 law or economics is pretty easy vs medicine or engineering 😂 Business has economics as a major here. But yes, Arts are the joke ones
@@theholypopechodeii4367 - dream on Dr hubris. I’ve degrees in both science, business and law and the latter (besides possibly economics) are degrees monkeys could obtain.
Bloody oath. Stupid and insecure. Typically anti-intellectual and pride ourselves on avoiding any depth of understanding beyond tools, 4WDs, jetskis and caravans. Meanwhile anyone who goes to a private school knows how to weaponise this stupidity and willfull ignorance against the dumbdumbs, in order to have them vote for policies that further marginalise themselves. Ask a tradie or a y other working class person what socialism is and means and you'll begin to understand the grip and control of the wealthy elite over the minds of the commoners
@@Ragnar6000 not plenty of others have liked that comment, including myself. Put the same royalties as Qatar on leg exports and have an extra $74 billion per year. Support PIB and have an extra $21 billion per year. Aust is forecasted to have the next 40 years of deficits. Nothing intelligent about that. A super industry worth $3.5 trillion and cannot invest considerably in Australia. There is a land shortage. Take 1% of super funds (about $35 billion) and develop land lots for cost price. Massively reduce land prices around Australia and allow Australians to own their own homes again, rather than losing out to immigrants.
I think we are too obsessed about the economy crashing. In the right sense, the economy never crashes. It just undergoes cycles, and almost always recovers. So I really don't care what the predictions are. I just want to grow my portfolio. I read that people are pulling in massive profits despite the downturn. Any tips on how they do it?
I think it's the professionals and those who use their services that are really pulling in the big money right now. There are really advisors that can help you achieve very consistent growth. I have a friend who pulled in more than $194k profit within three months. So you just have to make some research and get one who fits your fin-goal.
The market will always recover. The goal is to find quality stocks with long term potential. It's hard for the average Joe to do this, because it involves following a lot of industry news, following up with earnings, etc. It's easier to invest through an advisor who knows how stuff works, and make rocket returns.
Investing in quality stocks with long-term potential is a good strategy, but it can be challenging for the average person to do this on their own. Keeping up with industry news and earnings can be time-consuming and difficult. That's why it's easier to work with an advisor who can help you make informed decisions and potentially achieve high returns.
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.
Annette Marie HoltAnnette Marie Holt is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Empower Financial Services. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
The economic crisis and downturn are all the signs of 2008 market crash 2.0, so my question is do I still save in the US dollar or is it okay to move all emergency and savings to precious metals??
In light of the ongoing global economic crisis, it is crucial for everyone to prioritize investing in diverse sources of income that are not reliant on the government. This includes exploring opportunities in stocks, gold, silver, and digital currencies. Despite the challenging economic situation, it remains a favorable time to consider these investments. Nevertheless, seeking guidance from an investment planner might be necessary if you desire a more assertive return.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
Great gains there! mind sharing details of your advisor please? i've started gaining more cash flow with my employment and looking at putting money into stocks and alternative assets that can help build wealth over time.
Stacy Lynn Staples is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
Thank you for this tip , I must say stacy, appears to be quite knowledgeable. After coming across her webpage, I thoroughly went through her resume, and I must say, it was quite impressive. I reached out to her, and I have booked a session with her.
Some economists have projected that both the U.S. , Australia and parts of Europe could slip into a recession for a portion of 2023. A global recession, defined as a contraction in annual global per capita income, is more rare because China and emerging markets often grow faster than more developed economies. Essentially the world economy is considered to be in recession if economic growth falls behind population growth.
It's a delicate season now, so you can do little or nothing on your own. Hence I’ll suggest you get yourself a financial expert that can provide you with valuable financial information and assistance
Very true! I've been able to scale from $50K to $189k in this red season because my Financial Advisor figured out Defensive strategies which help portfolios be less vulnerable to market downturns
“Rebecca Nassar Dunne” has always been on the top of my list..She is regarded as a genius in her area and well knowledgeable about financial markets. I highly recommend you look her up if you want excellent collaboration.
diversified economy as in Australia's exports aren't focused on a single area. but lack diversification and sophistication because australia isn't doing anything to improve the quality of their products either for themselves or exports
definitely noticed that. the script wasnt coherent. maybe written at different times or by different people. to make a gaff like that youd possibly even have parts that are plagiarised or AI generated.
I am a mechanical engineer working in manufacturing in Aus for last 20 years , can count at least 100 factories gone down because of red tape, unions, ultra high energy prices. We are dumb to sell coal to china so that they can run factories on cheap and we closed down our coal power plants which lead to manufacturing decline....
You’ve hit the nail on the head. Unfortunately we’ve had 30 years of declining interest rates, high immigration, a real estate and mining boom that has juiced our economy and left an entire generation thinking it’s just normal to get paid a six-figure salary while sitting around and basically doing FA. It’s going to be an almighty reality check for these people when the music stops.
@@joestjack Well looking at last 4 yrs I doubt the critical thinking of all Aussies. The way all lined up like sheep to get jabbed with poison. West in general has lost the ability to THINK. Its lost cause. People let it happen cause avg man doesnt care till his job is thretened. No one carea about who is in Canberra. So we are puppets of currupt system run by Elites of WEF. They wanna see a degenerate Australia. Thats what we have now. Footy beer pubs .....no innovation...just dig holes send to China....dumb nation
I'm a mechatronics grad and tbh I'm thinking of passing off to the USA because jibs are scarce and the only people really hiring are consulting companies who do sweet FA and get played by the gov.
Unions had nothing to do with Australian manufacturing over the last 20 years. Manufacturing unions were already decimated decades earlier. Competition from ultra low cost countries minimal import tariffs, high energy costs and regulation are much bigger factors.
@@Boababa-fn3mr I’m not so sure about that. From my house in Rockingham I can see the Alcoa Kwinana refinery which is currently closing down and the old BP refinery site which closed a few years ago. Both had strong aggressive unions who went on strike year after year because they thought they deserved higher pay, they wrapped the business in red tape and basically just took the piss. The people that used to work there were some of the laziest people I know yet thought the world owed them a six figure salary. It’s impossible this wasn’t a factor in the company’s lack of profitability and subsequent decision to close. So I definitely wouldn’t suggest that unions were the only reason we lost our manufacturing but they are certainly a factor and your statement that they had nothing to do with it I don’t think is correct.
I left Australia 15 years ago for Dubai. I had no idea I had an employee mindset until moving. Australians don't have the entrepreneurial mindset because the culture isn't there. I knew no one in Australia that though big. Australians identify with the aussoe battler or underdog swag man, this causes a tall poppy syndrome to occur when one tries to stand out. Not only do people look down on them for trying but the individual also faces huge guilt issues when going for success. Australians have mistaken submissiveness for humility. I fantasize about returning home however everytime I go back for holiday i realise it's not for me. It's just so stagnant. Beautiful but stagnant
Australia is run more like a mining project than a country! Banks, consultants, big corps. mining giants... run this project (via bought out politicians) with profit optimization as their only driver. This includes minimizing operational and maintenance expenses, aka public services, infrastructure, r&d, education, health, etc...while maximizing income from taxes, export of raw materials, and import of cheap labour.... Total disregard to the current and future welfare of the ordinary citizen and the environment.
Well, yeah. Aside from mining, nothing else matters in Straya anymore. The population serves zero purpose in the global economy beyond supporting the mineral resources sector.
Australia is NO LONGER the lucky country I can tell you that. When my parents and I arrived in the 90's it was, despite unemployment being 'high' it was the lucky country. Fuel - 40c per litre, Housing around 60k, full trolley of shopping
Why would the government care to think about the housing, infrastructure, and innovation or even expanding to the outer the city when you can put tax on cigarettes and alcohol. Who made cigarettes become underground for the black-market? $50 bucks for a pack of 25's and they're telling us that they are doing for us. What a joke! If they care about our health then maybe put some incentives on fruit and veg. Soon the alcoho bizzo will bet burnt down too! How are people supposed to own their own land? Youth crime is getting out of hand, only if these kids know how crime works overseas. Rich and Dumb, yes! Soon it will be Broken and and clueless.
Purchasing power hasn't kept up at all for average folk. They're lucky to have received 2% nominal pay rises per year, in the face of much higher inflation, especially in housing.
People try to predict the economy not realizing it is not a capitalistic market, its a command economy, central planning! my concern is, instead of having much dollar in bank that could lose value to inflation, do I save in gold to reserve and grow wealth for now, or just hang on?
truth is that gold serves as an inflation hedge in the long run, but not profitable in the short run. only thing you can predict is a strong effort of wealth transfer from the people to the powerful. luckily some folks find solution in financial advisors
Sure, investing is plain-sailing with the aid of an invt-specialist, thus I've always delegated my excesses ever since the rona-outbreak in January 2020 using a shrewd advisor, and my investments have compounded by at least 300%, summing up $820k ROI as of today.
There are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Aileen Gertrude Tippy’’ for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
I came to Australia back in 1995 , woked hard , had some deposite brought from overseas , bought my first house in year 2001 , for $198.000 . my weekly wages was about $650 . Today 25/07 /24 , my weekly wages is around $880 .same houst that I bought it's worth around $1.1 Million . Australia was great , not anymore .
@@neilblackburn6869 I totally understand you champ . I've been here since 1995 , never felf like home and never will .but because my children were born here , and they didn't want to go any other country , I got stucked like you . the country is full of idiots , and racist bastards .
If you have been in Australia for so long and you're not even making a grand a week then you didn't make the right decisions. 880 was my weekly salary when I arrived in 2018. If you have any basic licences or tickets you can definitely make more money than 800 a week
Australia “was” a wonderful place to grow up, unfortunately progressively the country has been plundered by global corporations that pay little to NO TAX which successive governments have fostered. Australia is a very smart country, but with the recourses this country has the education system should be a priority but often struggles to be properly funded. As we stand today our country struggles financially, successive governments have sold the “Farm”, most of our assets have been sold to foreign countries/ companies - even some of our water rights? Yes this may be somewhat simplistic, but in this day and age I believe we should be far better off!
Your understanding of the term "The Lucky Country" is wrong. It is a quote by Donald Horne to explain that Australia's economy seems to keep succeeding through decisions that would sink the economy of other countries. From his book: "Australia is a lucky country run mainly by second rate people who share its luck. It lives on other people's ideas, and, although its ordinary people are adaptable, most of its leaders (in all fields) so lack curiosity about the events that surround them that they are often taken by surprise." Also, Australia managed to survive the GFC not because of the mining boom, but because of economic decisions by the PM & Treasurer of the time, including borrowing from China to keep spending going.
Correct about the Lucky Country. The decision by Rudd during the GFC suggests some of the leaders are not so mediocre, but that the same decision was taken during the pandemic instead of running a UBI experiment or doing what the Swedes did confirms Horne's concerns.
As a 71 year old Australia, I've watched our industry close, our society become more stratified over the last 50 years. I really don't like where we're heading. Seriously considering alternatives.
I am a born and bred Australian. Excellent video. A number of points well made, particularly around the selling of raw materials rather than doing some processing here and hence value-adding to create industries and jobs, and then selling that processed stuff for much more (ie dumb and getting dumber). You missed a couple of points. By and large Australia is virtually giving away its resources. Our governments give overseas (and Australian) companies licences to mine, but then allow those companies to pay only pitiful royalties back into Australian coffers. For the amount of natural resources we have and the relatively low population we should be by far the richest per capita nation in the world. Yet we have homeless people and many people living below the poverty line. This is all because our govts kowtow to rich industrialists and give our wealth away to them in return for their personal and political support. Another big miss in your video is around housing. We have a tax rort called 'negative gearing'. It is a shocking and unethical tax evasion scheme that encourages rich people to keep on buying property, which has now made it virtually impossible for regular a Australian to buy a home. It is disgraceful. Yet again, our govts won't end the scheme because they kowtow to the demands of the rich who donate to their political parties. It is corruption writ large. There is a lot good in this country compared to many others, but like most western economies, our wealth is rapidly being concentrated into the hands of the rich few to the massive detriment of the majority average person who is struggling terribly with costs of living and housing. It is immoral what is going on here, and completely preventable if our govts weren't so weak and corrupt. We could have the greatest and fairest and most 'looking after everyone' country in the world, but our spineless politicians over decades have buckled to the rich and screwed over the rest of us. Deplorable
thank you for your drill down comment Peter, about Australia, " The Lucky Country" and the reasons why we our becoming dummer - lack of innovation and home based industrial Industries.
Don't forget the capital gains tax discount - that's probably the bigger incentive to property investors. Australian politicians micromanage too much, too. Tax laws disincentivize efficient use of homeowner's spare rooms. Don't forget the laziness of using mass immigration to keep GDP up, too (whilst suppressing per capita GDP).
We used to make things...... Australia 's manufacturing sector and thus our production capability was decimated after the federal government signed us up to the "Lima Declaration" without any public consultation in the 1970's. We agreed to wind down 30% of our production and to import it from overseas instead. This included primary produce like meat and fruit etc... The 30% disastrously blew out to a whopping 90% of production capacity gone....
A extremely rich country in natural resources.... Sounds like the middle east with their oil reserves. But Australia has been governed so badly, and politicians are so short sighted that unfortunately the general public is now the biggest losers. Australia should have free education, free healthcare, childcare, elder care etc etc etc. No tolls on any roads, houses should be affordable and we should have very low income tax. But none of this is true because we haven't managed our natural resources properly
So many whingets in oz go travel see how shit europe and divided states are then apologise for being a whinger livin in by far best country in the world
Yes all of that is caused by mining companies basically running our government, alongside other big business. We see next to no tax for all the profits these companies make off our natural resources. Our government has to be the most ineffective in the western world at helping its constituents. We are USA 2.0
We aren't wealthy, we just raised housing prices to unfathomable levels. And we have no true wealth generating assets other than homes. People get rich in Australia through two means, hoarding housing or gambling.
Well minimum wages in Australia still among the highest in the world, many innovative countries get lower paid compare to Australia. This is a question mark so Australian describe as rich and dumb.
In Australia, many tradies do much better than experienced professionals. There is no incentive for people to get higher qualifications. You can’t have a sophisticated economy when you operate like that.
Sad truth. Not that trades aren’t important, but rather that highly skilled professionals get paid so poorly. Why bother doing things that truly push the nation into the 21st century when you can make so much more on the tools.
As a tradesman I think we are generally underpaid. The only ones who earn ok money do something extra like overtime, have their own business, specialise in something, 2 jobs etc
As an Aussie in my 20s trying to figure out my professional career, I don't see much of a future here. We export a lot of raw goods and accept many skilled immigrants, leaving a lot of Australians without opportunities. I studied applied physics but our research sector is critically underfunded, and if we had a bigger manufacturing industry I could at least look for interesting work there. I'd love to be working in green energy but that gets suppressed for obvious reasons. It seems better to just resign myself to something basic to pay the bills, but I'd really prefer to be doing highly innovative work and earning enough to actually afford a home. Our economy seems absolutely rigged against poorer, younger and - rather surprisingly - highly educated Australians. And don't think that our government isn't corrupt, we give away natural gas to overseas companies for free and encourage the rich to speculate on housing. Foreign bribery is a massive issue right now.
Yup. You're not alone. It's also great having to pay out our university debts before you can even be considered for a home loan - which could potentially crash in value.
oh come on. Many Anglo-australian kids only want to have fun and go for the trades, most of the local students in the serious careers in Australian universities are children of immigrants. My son went to an expensive private school, most of his schoolmates ended up being tradies or sport related 'professionals' such as physiotherapists, sport movement specialists, etc and be at the beach at 3pm (very important). Stop complaining about skilled immigration, this is the sector who does the heavy lifting in the workforce.
Straya is going down and average folk in future generations are gonna find the buy in cost just isn't worth the reward in the end. Start looking elsewhere.
@@Boababa-fn3mr I meant real skilled migration not taxidrivers from Mumbai with pseudo-engineering degrees. I work in the mining sector in Perth, most of the brains behind the mega-projects are foreign educated and very skilled. Even overseas projects are engineered from Perth these days bringing hard currency to Australia in fees. You can fix taps yourself if you can’t find a plumber!
"Australia is a lucky country run mainly by second rate people who share its luck. It lives on other people's ideas, and, although its ordinary people are adaptable, most of its leaders (in all fields) so lack curiosity about the events that surround them that they are often taken by surprise"
@sandponics in case of Australia you dont need to be smart to get rich- inheritance solid base from parents and reasonable common sense where to invest money & not excessively use of drugs gambling and alcohol.
The LNG income tax from exports by Australia is very low. Qatar has free health care, education and universities based on their LNG tax on exports. Australia has limited government healthcare and education is not free. Government not clever at all -outsmarted by almost all foreign companies. Australia also allows foreign ownership of real estate-this has led to ridiculous price increases for home ownership, making it unaffordable for people to buy a home. No longer the “lucky country” 🤷♂️
Aussie who has owned and run businesses here, Japan and Thailand as well as worked in China and South Korea. Based on that experience, I’ll never run another in Australia, … the red tape here is unbelievable and the tax/endless government charges out of control. It’s simply not worth it, easier to do it elsewhere.
@@trails3597 economically US is nowhere in club of other. It's companies, industries and markets are exceptional. Inequality is there no sure but from a country perspective US is in a different league.
@@CountingStars333this is irrelevant to a company’s economic performance. For all of the crap it gets, the us economy is extremely robust compared to the rest of the world
Excellent summary and here's the money quote: "Australia's entire economic strategy hinges on just two things: selling houses and extracting resources from the ground". Yip, and the politicians don't seems to want to mess with this 'sound' strategy, seeing as it has worked well enough so far. They'd rather wait until it fails and blame the other party and literally anyone else before setting about doing anything to change it.
With an economy based largely on selling real estate and extracting resources from the ground, and with low productivity and low investment in R&D, Australia looks very much like Canada.
As an Australian I cannot fault the logic behind this commentary and overview of our country. Additionally, as a member of a team that has developed a new disruptive lifesaving technology that is being manufactured in-country, I, along with others in our team have been staggered by the ignorance and lack of support received by both governments and institutions thereby making our project far more difficult by comparison to other progressive thinking nations.
We are overly fixated on the idea that the economy will collapse. In reality, the economy cycles and always recovers, so I don't really care what the forecasts are; all I want is to increase my portfolio. I've read that some people are making enormous profits in spite of the recession. Do you have any advice on how they manage this?
I think it's the professionals and those who use their services that are really pulling in the big money right now. There are really advisors that can help you achieve very consistent growth. I have a friend who pulled in more than $194k profit within three months. So you just have to make some research and get one who fits your fin-goal.
The market will always recover. The goal is to find quality stocks with long term potential. It's hard for the average Joe to do this, because it involves following a lot of industry news, following up with earnings, etc. It's easier to invest through an advisor who knows how stuff works, and make rocket returns.
Investing in quality stocks with long-term potential is a good strategy, but it can be challenging for the average person to do this on their own. Keeping up with industry news and earnings can be time-consuming and difficult. That's why it's easier to work with an advisor who can help you make informed decisions and potentially achieve high returns.
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.
Errrr as a 38yo Aussie I'm 5 minutes in and REALLY scratching my head. So much of this isn't true. We get so rorted by the resources companies who pay so little in taxes back to the Australian people. We're not all rich, but definitely agree with the dumb and getting dumber!
My husband and I were fortunate enough to be able to pay off our mortgage early. We were both still working, and took the payment amount that we had been using to pay off our mortgage faster and we put it straight into investments. We were able to retire early because of almost 7 years of putting away what would have been our mortgage payment as well as maxing out our 401K/403B plans. Thankfully we were taught by both of our parents the value of living within our means. Thank you for your advice. I know it will help people. we are interested in investments that could set me up for retirement , I mean I've heard of people that netted hundreds of thousands during these crash, I listened to someone on a podcast who earned over $650K in less than a year, what's the strategy behind such returns?
Investing without proper guidance can lead to mistakes and losses. I've learned this from my own experience.If you're new to investing or don't have much time, it's best to get advice from an expert.
Even with the right strategies and appropriate assets, investment returns can differ among investors. Recognizing the vital role of experience in investment success is crucial. Personally, I understood this significance and sought guidance from a market analyst, significantly growing my account to nearly a million. Strategically withdrawing profits just before the market correction, I'm now seizing buying opportunities once again.
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.
00:07 Australia's economy is rich due to natural resources 02:10 China's demand for raw materials fueled Australia's iron ore exports boom. 04:05 Australia's economy grew due to migration and resource management 06:28 Australia's economic growth is fueled by immigration (asians mainly then europeans) 08:31 Australia's economy is rich but lacking in diversification and sophistication 10:39 Australia's low productivity growth is hindering its economy. 12:47 Rapid urbanization in Australia strains housing affordability. 14:46 Australia's economy heavily relies on housing and resource extraction.
Great summary. So what should be done to capitalise on these to make Australia able to perform like SoKor, Japan or S'pore? Looks like China is Australia's quick cash cow (or cash panda?) which cannot be ignored. The elected persons to lead the nation must emphasise more on nation building than on politicking or self-enrichment. Bipartisan efforts, perhaps?
Australia rode on the back of China and Asian immigration but shuns Asians as backwatered and poverty, treats immigrants like second class when the economy is strong. Now with inflation and weakening economy, Australia calls out for its government to give them money to maintain their expensive lifestyle but refuses to work for menial dollars and blames Asian immigration for taking up all their remaining houses (thereby putting up rent and property prices). An island of mediocrity
Australia's economic complexity has declined significantly. Thousands of people now need to find other sources of income because of the constantly shifting economic realities globally. Its not just in Australia! I'm personally looking to the stock market to help me reach my $2 million retirement goal, but I'm worried about the recent market fall
Buying a stock is easy, but buying the right stock without a time-tested strategy is incredibly hard. hence I will suggest you get yourself a financial-Advisor that can provide you with entry and exit points on best stocks to buy now or put on a watchlist.
Absolutely! I don't have the time to carefully evaluate my investments and research particular stocks because of my hectic work schedule. I have therefore hired a financiiaI advisr to actively manage my portfolio for the last seven years in order to adjust to the state of the market. I've been able to successfully traverse the financial environment by using this method to make well-informed judgements about when to buy and sell. Maybe you ought to think about taking a similar strategy.
Can't disagree with anything has been said considering i have lived my whole life in Sydney. People say Australia is a fair and equal opportunity country but they never mention how corrupt the Australian government is at all levels of government. Probably the worse governments in the world that has exploited the countries resources for decades so they can fill up their offshore bank accounts.
I will say this again and again: Australia is a country with Third-world political dynamics and First-world standards of living. I have no doubt that Future generations will be paying for the crony policies of Past governments.
This is the same thing that is happening in Canada. Rich in resources dumb in Economy which is why both countries have speculative real estate bubbles.
Perhaps we shouldn't ignore the fact our housing prices are high because a lot of people also want to move here to live, because it's a better place to live than most of the world.
@@tsubadaikhan6332 we're definitely not ignoring that fact, it's not just the demand side but the supply side as well. My point stands that for sustained economic growth, relying on real estate property values as a retirement fund is not ideal.
@@lindsaysmith8119The demand side coming from extremely high immigration levels that aren’t sustainable is the biggest factor. If you looked at 2020 and early 2021, the rental and housing costs decreased due to the lockdowns which reduced immigration.
One of the most impressive aspects of Michael Hugh Terpin trading prowess is his keen understanding of market dynamics. He possesses a deep knowledge of various cryptocurrencies, their underlying technologies, and the broader economic factors influencing their value. This comprehensive understanding enables him to make well-informed investment decisions that consistently yield positive returns.
Furthermore, Michael Hugh Terpin’s trading strategy is marked by a disciplined approach and a focus on risk management. He employs a diverse range of analytical tools and techniques to identify lucrative trading opportunities while mitigating potential risks. This meticulous approach has not only safeguarded my investments but has also generated substantial profits over time.
It's a miracle and I would testify, $110,000 every 4 weeks! I now have a big mansion and can now afford anything and also support God's work and the church
Australia is no different from any Middle East oil country. The only difference is Australia is in the middle of the Pacific. That is it. Selling resources.
Excellent analysis and reporting. There's been no long term strategic plan for Australia since Keating. ('91-96) Countries like South Korea have half the tax revenue per capita of Australia and yet they have managed to transition their economies. Australia had the opportunity to transition primary industry to renewables to the point of becoming a net energy exporter to a regional market of over half a billion end consumers and did nothing. There are obvious sinkholes in federal and state budgets where money just 'disappears' without being properly accounted for by GAAP standards. A lot of Australians are left wondering WHERE DO THE TAX DOLLARS REALLY GO? It certainly doesn't seem to go towards its own security like future proofing of maintaining the long term standard of living of tax payers. Most politicians seem to struggle with doing their day jobs let alone the work that needs to be done. So I think we can say the days of the mid 20th century moniker 'The Lucky Country' are well and truly over. 'The Lost Country' is more accurate. At least half the comments from Australians here relate to them individually not collectively. I mean QED.
Some points you overlooked include Australia's strong and in many Ag industries, world leading producers. True that these industries are restrained by the urbane folies you described. However, as a technology leader in this sector, with good resource management and an excellent capacity to grow, Australia can (and I hope), will recover from the Canadian disease you have described
Australia has this real bad case of tall poppy syndrome which we use as a means of keeping eachother humble/grounded, but the truth is in many ways it stifles our innovation and often see's our best minds immigrate to the USA or Europe where there are more opportunities. It exists within every industry... no doubt
Believe me we are not rich you may see that figure being so high but go to a supermarket and realise what cost $5 in the USA costs $15 in Australia (AU rates there). We may make alot on paper but that means nothing when everything costs as much as more than most other nations.
@@chopsmith4712 So if the doctor writes your prescription for paxlovid and you're on amiodarone. I hope your white coat pharmacist just hands you the medication.
@@chopsmith4712 If your doctor writes you a script for Paxlovid whilst you're on Amiodarone. I hope your white coat pharmacist just hands you the medication.
@@chopsmith4712 If your doctor writes your a script for ciprofloxacin whilst you're on Amiodarone. I hope your white coat pharmacist just hands you the medication.
@@woox200sx Pharmacist job sounds ripe for replacement by an AI. Can catch conflicts in meds, can read, process and generate paper work, can probably even read doctors hand writing better ;D. Bots can fetch and package meds...
This is a fair summary tbh. You understate the housing problem though - it is catastrophic. Middle-class people in fulltime work are living in their cars because there are either no available rentals, or the greedy investor landlords are raising rents beyond reach. People can't plan a life nor have children if they don't have stable nor fairly priced housing. There have been warnings about lack of skills for decades. Australia's impending dire situation is a symptom - the disease is government after government grasping while in office and not thinking beyond its three-year term. Leaders have failed us.
Each successive government seems determined to ride our once in a lifetime opportunity into the ground with nothing real to show for it but massively overinflated housing prices. The "lucky country" was a poke at how we've been successful so far despite some very questionable economic management.
As an Aussie this is extremely well researched. Maybe don’t agree 100% on every statement but you’re pretty damn close overall. FYI regarding builders going bankrupt - the issue is actually in Australia they do fixed price contacts, so when the inflation spike hit, builders had the choice to either do the project at a loss or go bankrupt. They need to change to laws to allow for price ratcheting. Why can’t we build more homes? #1 is absolutely nimbyism and cultural. If you live in an apartment, like people will think you’re poor and “how unfortunate for you.” This is a cultural problem. And classic, every nice neighbourhood in Sydney they don’t wanna ruin the community feel or whatever it’s actually very perverse. My folks are in this category. The 2nd bit is also cultural but skilled tradespeople are looked down upon in our society. Despite the fact young tradies are earning mega bux > 100k when the average uni grad is making like 70k (with student debt). Every kid gets drilled into them go to uni, and guess what, now we have a bazillion useless commerce grads and no skilled tradies. Also people don’t wanna study stem. I am the only person I know who became a software developer (never met a developer in Australia outside a professional context like at my rugby club or in a bar or whatever) and I moved to USA lol way better opportunities
Excellent insights, and cultural stigma of the trades is very strong in the US as well. Alongside fixed price contracts, considering that so many construction companies got washed out in 2021 and 2022, do you feel that the government response to the pandemic had an impact on the construction companies?
@@iramunn9611 I am an immigrant here in the US and have lived in Canada and Denmark so I am by no means anti migration but the issue was compounded by the fact when all these new housing starts got canned, they also accelerated immigration to catch up for the lack of it during COVID and the supply and demand equation just got so fucked up. No new housing but 100s of 1000s who are expecting to live somewhere. It’s just poor policy on multiple levels. An idea would be to target the skilled migration specifically towards, I dunno, people who work in construction? What also does not help (at least in NSW) is they allowed the construction industry to self regulate for a while so a number of very low quality apartment buildings went up and later on these building became legally uninhabitable due to structural faults (opal tower, mascot tower etc) and all the apartment owners got left holding the bag. I think there was a warranty period but it was short. This has scared people off of buying an apartment and having a stronger preference for existing stock. So it’s a confluence of issues
On point re: the NIMBYism. But i would also add housing and strata law on that. There are many people who are willing to live in apartments, though not by first choice over houses, it’s the basic rules of not allowing pets to live in apartments, not allowing to wash your car on common driveway because there’s none provided, not allowing to party after 10pm, not allowing to install a door on your balcony without strata’s approval. Australia has become the land of nanny states we might as well give ourselves the moniker China-lite and install CCTVs at every road intersection. Look at Sydney, it’s become a ghost town due to the lock-out law because of a few incidents. Yes it was unfortunate and sad but you can’t make everyone suffer coz of a few. And now they want to fine you if you don’t wear your seatbelt properly. If people don’t want to cherish their life, then let them. They need to be responsible for themselves and let them suffer the consequences if they don’t. Govt should stop trying to be “we know better and it’s for your own good”. Rants over. Thanks for listening.
Prior to 1975 Australia manufactured everything required and exported excess. Then the government signed us up to the Lima agreement and the downward spiral began thanks to the U.N.
Fantastic video! I have incurred so much losses trading on my own....I trade well on demo but I think the real market is manipulated.... Can anyone help me out or at least tell me what I'm doing wrong??
Investing with an expert is the best strategy for beginners and busy investors, as most failures and losses in investment usually happen when you invest without proper guidance. I'm speaking from experience.
Good video. Some points (housing bias): 1. Australia survived the GFC primarily because Kevin Rudd (Prime Minister) increased net immigration circa 10% inside his first term (unprecedented). This kept house prices from falling (the GFC was a housing price issue in other countries). 2. Universities dropped their education standards, so that immigrants could flow into the country. 3. Corruption in politics and inside universities is such that Landlording is the main way average Australian's are getting richer. 4. Because Landlording is prolific in Australia, the rate of owner-occupation is decreasing and Landlording (renting) is outpacing Owner-Occupation. 5. Corruption by politicians protecting their real estate portfolios is prolific in Australia. 6. The rate of development of new stock is less than the rate of Landlording. In other words Landlords are cannibalising their neighbours and the race is on the see who owns the most property, making it harder for families to start and first home buyers. 7. Australia does not have strong manufacturing sector! Correct - we are ranked 82nd on complexity. But manufacturing ended when we floated our currency decades ago. We don't make anything sophisticated. 8. Our natural born rate is low because housing costs are so high. Because immigration is too high. Because politicians and universities and Landlording has outpaced new building stock and consumer protection of owner-occupation. For example, as at 10th September, the average house price in Perth (Western Australia) increased 20% in the past 12 months! That is an inflationary disgrace, but because politicians and academics (and others) are Landlords the effects and affects of this are muted in the media. When Landlording is greater than Owner-Occupation , renting increases, and the quality of life declines. I simply don't accept the broad brush statements that the quality of living in Australia is as good as it was 20 years ago when housing was more affordable relative to wages. Landlording is why Australia and other countries will continue to have a poorer standard of living despite the 'traditional matrix boring economists use to 'measure' quality of life'. We need to change the real estate incentives to where owner-occupation and new stock development is far more profitable than Landlording of existing properties. Local planning rules have bugger all to do with why house prices are high. Compared to the abovementioned, it's just not worth mentioning that local planning rules have any measurable effect on house prices. Rather, the incentives for Landlording are far greater the incentives to become and builder or developer. Why develop (literally create new stock) your way to wealth, when one can just go to a bank and buy an existing property in an established location and rent it out to the immigrants and poorer persons? Landlords outbidding potential owner-occupiers for the same stock (ie landlords converting potential owner-occupier stock to rental stock) is the cancer infecting the West. Bankrolling Landlording, instead of Developing Brand New Stock, and associated incentives, is the problem of the West.
majority aren't suffering, it's those who has no generational wealth and are either young or recent migrants. the older australians are laughing their way to the bank.
We are not lucky in Australia. We have 9.000 people who have no place to live. Only the street we need to build more houses for people who are in low income families who have been priced out of the market. And our young people don't won't to work. Most of our young people are on Drugs. This is a big problem.i.dont see anything that makes us lucky.
Buying a stock is easy, but buying the right stock without a time-tested strategy is incredibly hard. Hence what are the best stocks to buy now or put on a watchlist? I’ve been trying to grow my portfolio of $560K for sometime now, my major challenge is not knowing the best entry and exit strategie;s ... I would greatly appreciate any suggestions.
Investing without proper guidance can lead to mistakes and losses. I've learned this from my own experience.If you're new to investing or don't have much time, it's best to get advice from an expert.
A lot of folks downplay the role of advlsors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember couple summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to help my business stay afloat, hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation, from $275k to $850k.
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.
Svetlana Sarkisian Chowdhury is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
Thank you for this tip. it was easy to find your coach. Did my due diligence on her before scheduling a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her résumé.
The comment abou transparent approval processes and no corruption is demonstrably false. Australia has an extremely opaque lobbying industry and continues to sneak in approvals for mineral projects despite a commitment to reduce emissions. Even though we might not be flagrantly corrupt in the same way as developing nations the pocket padding of politicians and their interests on both sides of the two major parties is still there.
What? Your talking down corruption. Mate you have no idea what's going on then. Not as corrupt as developing nations?? Australia is far more corrupt. Yes there' regulations and government agencies to enforce them, but tell me a single case that actually mattered and made a difference? The recent ACCC sandal underpins how corrupt Australia is. Anz bought Suncorp's banking arm, even though the ACCC blocked the deal initially. The acting treasurer overturned the ACCC decision? The case they made was very strong too. It was in direct breach of anti-competition laws mate. Explain that one please?
Vancouver BC and all of Canada are very similar: everything based on immigration & natural resources, lots of red tape and mediocrity but not the outright corruption of the 3rd world. It does infuriate me that our provincial government takes away our property rights to encourage more housing, but does nothing to improve zoning & reduce red tape. I'm pretty sure it's the same Down Under. PS: great videos on YT about how building code changes can totally revolutionize apartment buildings & double housing.
It's called the lucky country because you must be lucky if you can survive here not because the country itself is lucky. And I'm sure the largest export is education not mining...
"Every time a kiwi emigrates to Aussie the IQ of both countries goes up." Rob Muldoon NZ PM. It's the age old problem: good times makes men weak in the head.
Lets be honest, if it wasn't for Asians migrating here, us Aussies would score lower in productivity, entrepreneurship and academically. One huge issue is that our news isn't free. Most 1st world countries have free news. Let it be online or tv. In Australia our tv news is full of commercials or garbage sponsored content and our online media are behind paywalls.
My daughter and son-in-law returned home after failing to fund reasonable jobs in Australia. They did very well in a top Australia university but had no future there.
As long as Australia remains politically dependent on the US, it's future's going to look bleaker and bleaker. Remember, a great deal of Australia's much vaunted 'luck' depends on its not poking the Chinese panda in the eyes.
The US is a minor problem compared to China. What you're suggesting is counterintuitive. Australia needs to reduce Chinese migration and real estate investment and reduce its economic dependence on China. As manufacturing diversifies across more countries, China's share will decrease. Other countries will become bigger customers of Australian natural resources.
Who is responsible for driving innovation? The citizens, the government, industry? Regardless of which political party you vote for, you want the government to strengthen the economy and increase individual prosperity. Government is responsible for funding science and technology. Government is where the levers are to direct and regulate industry. In Australia, we seem to have a political system ingeniously designed to 'take the easy option' when it comes to making difficult or unpopular decisions, regardless of how those decisions may improve the country.If any facet of our country is in desperate need of innovation, it is our system of governance.
You left out a couple of key points: - Most mining companies that operate in Australia are foreign owned so apart from a marginal tax, the profits go offshore. - When the government decided to privatise the assets the majority went overseas. To make things worse there is a culture in the workplace to basically do as little as possible without being noticed and that’s only getting worse with the next generations of workers.
What about the fact we can’t afford anything nowdays, the price of food and houses are fast surpassing our wages but work places can’t afford to pay us more, which is an imbalance. Most of us are becoming poorer , the numbers of money doesn’t actually go to most of us anymore but even taking away , so we are becoming poorer
This is what happens to countries who blindly follow and obey America's every order. Australia should make decisions for themselves. Instead of making China the enemy maybe focus on benefiting financially from it. Besides military America provides Australia with nothing for the everyday person. We should be neutral country were we build cooperation with all countries that can benefit Australia yet still stand up to ourselves if that country is trying to manipulate us
I think Australia has one silenced problem - she's an extension of Western Europe just like the Americas. However, whereas the Americas are an ocean away from Europe, Australia is 2 oceans and 2 continents away. The fact that, with the exception of New Zealand, all her neighbours are poor doesn't help either.
i think China literally carried her economy for the last 20 years.if u looked at the graph of her gdp growth, it rose steadily throughout the 20th century, but the minute China truly opened up and joined the WTO in 2001, australia's gdp curve along with the rise of china went parabolic. australia exports more than 100 billion in resources a year to china and is one of the only handful of countries in the world with a trade surplus with China, not to mention half the students fueling her 36 billion a year education industry is made up of China students and all that chinese money pouring into Australia real estate the last 15 years..... australia is more or less a vassal of China, that is when shes not a vassal of US.
Not a vassal of China as a vassal does everything the lord tells it to do. In fact China tried to destroy Australia by imposing trade tariffs on Australian exports when Australia called for a covid investigation but China did not impose sanctions on Australian iron ore and in the end it was China who came back to Australia desperate for Australian coal.
@@robertruggiero9999 considering how crucial china was to australia's economic prosperity, not just prosperity, her stratospheric growth and success in the 21st century whether or not the ordinary australian people understood or grasp the extend of it, while america did practically nothing at all except demand her to participate in some ridiculous 64 billion submarine deal in a show of "solidarity".....i mean CHina is literally australia's largest trading partner at nearly 299 billion USD while america is barely 78 billion...and in australia's media china is painted and portrayed as this bogeyman and enemy of the state or even pinko commies like where do people come off? where do u find such politicians lmao. and when people get angry and retaliate after much constraint for u to pretend to be the victim and being "bullied" i cant imagine in any other universe or reality would anyone even dare to treat their biggest benefactor with such an attitude...... hey u could at least be a man or country of principle and values and just say no to everything if u dont want China's money, 300 billion in trade plus all those billions chinese dumps in australian "education" racket and real estate......no need to be a hypocrite just for money. oh well cant blame them, australians are anglo saxons after all.....UK US and australia......would u expect them not to?although australia i would say is not as bad as UK and US together.... and well i also understand the anxieties when some other country or people especially that is not of ur kind starts playing a more and more prominent role and greater influence in economics and global politics....although u people seem to have no problem when the world and countries like singapore or Japan subjugated or submitted themselves to the west..... humans will be humans seeing how quickly australia was to fall in lock step with america playing the piped piper in this campaign of anti china sentiments and hate and vitrol....
Who remembers those merry go rounds that as children we climbed on and spun until those on the inside stayed on and those on the edge fell off? Well, you better make sure you are frugal and stay off the edge because a lot who are not are going to get flung off real quick real soon 😢
I've been here in Australia for 30 years. Urban sprawl is unsustainable. Australian love of houses, and negative gearing. Tradies' love of the Imported Utes, etc, [bigger and noiser the better], and the workers' paradise that is still Australia.
As an Australian, i think most the stuff in the video is spot on. the problems I see with Australia's economy is: 1) export, it is slowing down because China's development boom is slowing down. Maybe India will replace China for export of Iron ore and other materials? idk how long this will last, eventually the export rally will slow down. 2) houses/apartments prices are ridiculously high (Sydney is currently ranked 2nd most unaffordable place behind Hongkong, and we are not even a top tier financial center country like Hongkong or US). we are in a weird situation that we need immigrants to fill jobs such as construction to provide housing supply, but more immigrants also drive the demand of housing causes housing to be more unaffordable for Australian. Me earning 100k+ aud, i feel like it takes forever to save up for upfront payment for a mortgage given the rent is high. The boomers who bought their properties early are sitting on loads of equity (rich just get richer) 3)education - we have a lot of international students which they pay crazy amount of tuition fees (good for us), however, this also drive the demand of housing. In addition, I have seen a lot of local Australian complain that some of the international students compete with the locals for jobs after they graduate, which the competition causing the goal post of owning a property even further away. In conclusion, I do think Australia as of now is one of the best country to live in, even with those problems above. open to discussion, keen to hear everyone's perspective.
Anti immigrant sentiment that is so widespread at the moment is wildly exaggerated and a mere excuse of the politicians to fool uneducated people; housing crisis can be solved by regulating the rampant gig economy in real estate like air bnb.. and by making new houses (not rocket science, is it?)...the current argument in Australia - I want international students' money to fund my hecs and their labour to run my business but I don't want them to stay in a house is an argument that crosses all limits of greed and foolishness.
As a former graduate student of this beautiful country, it hurts to watch this analysis because there is so much truth in it. Without the vast resources and housing speculation, Australians will become poor until the next generation of hungry migrant’s seize up the opportunity and change Australia
We are not rich we are poor housing wealth is not rich we are income poor, yeah we have commodities but we get nearly 0 royalties from it. Gas we pay more than most countries even tho we are the 2 or third biggest exporter. This country is rich for the rich not for an average this is a poor country with high asset values not high income we are cash poor. Most are
I can go on and on but believe me this country is a Ponzi scheme and not a rich country. Look at births look at income tax as part of government income look at house prices to income. Look at energy expense against the world. We suck !
I have recently returned to australia after more than 2 decades overseas. The house prices here are ridiculous, especially in Sydney. Glad im set up overseas for retirement as im not going to be staying here permanently. I totally agree with the video ending that there is no clear plan for australia's future and any plan that private sector has gets virtually no support from the govt. With so much land couldnt aust be a green energy exporter using high voltage dc submarine cables. But with no support from the govt and only private sector funding. It just wont happen.
Im 28, live in Perth WA and thank god im in the mining industry. I can afford to invest in US stocks and at least ill be ok. Gen z here is screwed though. Unless they have major wealth passed down or manage to get a job with a competitive salary.
@@willchongwei what US stocks? I’ve got in S&P500 and it’s done well. I missed Nvidia though. Thought about it back in 2019 but didn’t pull the trigger. Dumbest mistake 🤦🏻♂️
@teamtoken I don't want to give personal advice. I can only tell you what I've done. I've DCA'd into companies I understand and think will continue revenue growth. I've done my research, and I'm not concerned about dips in the market. Semiconductor/Technology are my main holdings. NVDA AVGO TSM Goog META AMZN PLTR After that VISA MASTERCARD S&P 500 through IVV ASX Good luck
Almost every problem you mention in this video can be put down to international companies owning monopolies, and the gullibility of the people to listen to these companies. The comparison to south korea is the best example of this, we had a vision, it was called the NBN, but outside interests made sure that didn't happen. A diversified economy isn't good for foreign owned monopolies trying to extract maximum wealth from Australia.
Australian universities are more interested in DEI than developing technologies and combined with a poor entrepreneurial culture it is not surprising that Australia has fallen behind after advanced economies.
@ashmd4537 It is legal in Australia to advertise academic jobs and exclude people based on sex and ethnicity from applying (it is always white men being excluded). This is now common practice. The biggest public funder now approportions 50% of grants to women regardless of the number who apply all the quality of grants compared to those from men. DEI- Didn't Earn It, and in this case the long term effects on the quality of Australian academia will be disastrous.
Wish the same could be said about the American economy, more and more people might face a tough time in retirement. Low-paying jobs, inflation, and high rents make it hard to save. Now, middle-class Americans find it tough to own a home too, leaving them without a place to retire.
The increasing prices have impacted my plan to retire at 62, work part-time, and save for the future. I'm concerned about whether those who navigated the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am currently experiencing. The combination of stock market volatility and a decrease in income is causing anxiety about whether I'll have sufficient funds for retirement.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
The funny thing about Australia is that a lot of university educated people Want to live here. So we end up with lots of engineers from developing countries managing products which are then made in said developing countries. The manufacturing doesn’t count as Australian according to economic statistics but the knowledge is here.
its just college students regurgitating textbook knowledge that is already available everywhere in the world, but if u ask if australia can actually make or build anything, it is clear even from their automobile industry back in the 60s 70s and 80s....that its tragically a resounding NO.
The tragedy is that governments in developing countries can't get their business together so the frustration of living in those kinds of societies just puts off educated students into emigrating...... but those countries they migrate to aren't really all that, just more organised. so you get brain drain in one country, pro-skilled immigrant policies in another country and then eventually immigration restriction policies when too many people want to go. what do you think should be done?
I don't know much about economics or politics but Australia is a safer place than America however inflation and cost of living is getting too high. I haven't been impacted by it too much but when I go to the grocery store I end up spending $50 when it would had cost me like $20 back then, then something is up and it needs to be fixed. Many times I discuss prices with my American friends and $200 USD is about $330 AUD and I find that outrageous. Or like Americans complaining tht a brand new Triple A game costs $70-$80 USD but for Australia it'll set you back $100-$110. Ridiculous.
High wages mean Australia will never be globally competitive in high volume manufacturing. Australia does have a number of low volume / high complexity exporters in the defence and medical industries. In terms of farming, it’s only the highly industrialised low wage input farming where Australia is successful, wheat, barley, sugar, live cattle, sheep, etc. Farming with high labour input such as fruit is only for domestic consumption.
Totally agree it's a dumb country.. Who else would do everything to jeopardize their economic future by constantly being provocative towards their biggest trading partner and with big surplus in their favour by the way
Correct in that a high percentage of exports relates to natural resources. Incorrect in that not many Australians are employed in that space. Matters, domestically, are a lot more diverse than that. A lot of high value-added jobs. Unfortunately, a bit too much of "affluence" relates to real estate (a Ponzi scheme) and not enough to manufacturing.
Support my research and projects: ko-fi.com/econyt
Hi! Awesome people of the internet.
-Comments and suggestions are welcome.
-Please share videos with people who you think might enjoy this content.
-Don't forget to subscribe for more economics content!
You are awesome :)
hi! awesome content creator!
just a quick suggestion: still listening to the video but the background music is a bit too loud.. maybe make it a bit softer so the narration doesn't have to compete with the music in our ears 🙈😇
loving the content, thank you!! 🇦🇺🪃
You call us dumb again... see what happens big boy... ESHAY MY BAH!!!! 👊👊👊💥💥💥
has the OP heard of the term qualified idiot? I am actually surprised he found Australia on the map
You Are Indian Brother RUclipsr Or British Or USA
7:05 Why is Canada used to depict Aus?
As an American living in Australia the past 10 years, I would say the lack of innovation etc isn't so much Australia being 'dumb', but more that there is just no economic incentive. Australia is a country of abundance where mediocrity thrives - people can live a very comfortable life here without being particularly exceptional, so why push yourself? Whereas in the US you really need to out-work and out-hustle others to have any chance of a half-decent life.
@@neznet that’s not true …you can get along by being mediocre in the US too. But if you’re skilled and capable, you get paid better in the US. In Australia if you’re better than the others then they’ll destroy you instead of rewarding you. For context, I’m an Aussie living in the US 😄
Investment into housing in Australia has also taken priority over investment into business. Housing has historically provided far better and reliable returns.
As a New Zealander that moved here 20 years ago Australia is a country of Mediocrity. The amount of times my peers have flouted the "She'll be right" "If it ain't broke don't fix it" Mantra really bottlenecks innovation. People here are comfortable and get paid quite well hence there's no drive such as countries like Singapore, The US, Vietnam, Nigeria and other developing countries are spearheading breakthrough innovations.
Would you say mediocrity is caused by high wages for basic labour?
@@dumdumbrown4225100% mate
I’ve got masters in Mech Engineering and honestly it feels like it’s just diminishing returns. You can literally get paid 120k as a stop sign holder. Why bother with all that hard sciency stuff when you can get 120k for twisting a fucking pole.
Australia is a very basic economy that sells rocks for it’s wealth, nothing more. Thinking about getting an E3 Visa and moving to the US. Pay and opportunities are just incomparable. And yeah sounds like you know the tall poppy thing only too well.
Protecting your capital is much more important than making money. Basically because if you lose your capital, making money is much harder. ''Missing the train'' vs. ''losing your money''. There are a lot of trains, but if your money is gone, it's over.
Wall Street pitched so-called quality stocks with high profitability and low debt, as a kind of insurance against whatever the economy might throw at you. Quality stocks have underperformed the S&P500 this year, My $200k portfolio is down by approximately 20 %, any recommendations to scale up my returns on investment
Nobody knows anything You need to create your own process, manage risk and stick to the plan, through thick or thin While also continuously learning from mistakes and improving.
Exactly why i enjoy market decisions being guided by a pro , seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time both employing risk management and market experience , been using a portfolio-coach for over 2years+ and I've netted over $3million in that time frame.
please who is the consultant that assist you with your investment and if you don't mind, how do I get in touch with them?
When ‘Carol Vivian Constable’ is trading, there's no nonsense and no excuses. She wins the trade and you win. Take the loss, I promise she'll take one with you.
Australia has way too many monopolies. They are stifling competition, innovation and increasing the over a cost of living for all Australians.
Same as Canada
And 'Merika's almost there too. Gotta love mergers and private equity holding groups.
@@Daniel-ef7nk And New Zealand
Australia is overly bureaucratic with high costs at every step of the process of establishing and running business, generally poor work ethic from the populace, conservative and afraid of risk, change and innovation, slow and inefficient. All this makes it uncompetitive. However, it is reliable and stable economically and socially.
@@BLC72no better way to put it
I disagree with some statements in the first half of this video, but the second half is 100% correct. Australia is a wealthy country, mainly due to digging stuff out of the ground that we cannot even convert to a finished product; Australia is a highly educated country (lots of people with University degrees); but Australia is technologically almost a third world nation. We make almost no tech, we don't carry scientific research though to products we can sell, we import almost everything more complex than a tomato or cardboard box from Asia.
The problem is that it is possibly to live an affluent and comfortable life in Australia after getting an easy degree (ie little science or maths), such as law, economics or commerce. You don't even need a degree to get rich; just become a tradesmen or a real estate agent. 80% of the Australian economy is housing. To get rich, you borrow as much money as you can and purchase as many investment products as possible. Why go out of your way to set up a high tech factory or do complicated and expensive medical research?
Australia is heaven for rent-seeking capitalist. And hell for those of us who aren't.
Law and Economics are not easy degrees in the slightest lol. 'Easy degree' would be something like business or communications.
@@theholypopechodeii4367 law or economics is pretty easy vs medicine or engineering 😂 Business has economics as a major here. But yes, Arts are the joke ones
@@theholypopechodeii4367 - dream on Dr hubris. I’ve degrees in both science, business and law and the latter (besides possibly economics) are degrees monkeys could obtain.
The money doesn't get invested in technology
80% of the economy isn’t housing
"Australia is rich and dumb and getting dumber" as an aussie i can 100% confirm this is true.
speak for yourself! not for others!
Bloody oath. Stupid and insecure. Typically anti-intellectual and pride ourselves on avoiding any depth of understanding beyond tools, 4WDs, jetskis and caravans. Meanwhile anyone who goes to a private school knows how to weaponise this stupidity and willfull ignorance against the dumbdumbs, in order to have them vote for policies that further marginalise themselves.
Ask a tradie or a y other working class person what socialism is and means and you'll begin to understand the grip and control of the wealthy elite over the minds of the commoners
What's socialism? I vote for Gina Rinehart 😂 I is know what stuff is
@@Ragnar6000 not plenty of others have liked that comment, including myself. Put the same royalties as Qatar on leg exports and have an extra $74 billion per year. Support PIB and have an extra $21 billion per year. Aust is forecasted to have the next 40 years of deficits. Nothing intelligent about that. A super industry worth $3.5 trillion and cannot invest considerably in Australia. There is a land shortage. Take 1% of super funds (about $35 billion) and develop land lots for cost price. Massively reduce land prices around Australia and allow Australians to own their own homes again, rather than losing out to immigrants.
@@sunrisesunset8843 100% correct, Australia could of been far more richer!
I think we are too obsessed about the economy crashing. In the right sense, the economy never crashes. It just undergoes cycles, and almost always recovers. So I really don't care what the predictions are. I just want to grow my portfolio. I read that people are pulling in massive profits despite the downturn. Any tips on how they do it?
I think it's the professionals and those who use their services that are really pulling in the big money right now. There are really advisors that can help you achieve very consistent growth. I have a friend who pulled in more than $194k profit within three months. So you just have to make some research and get one who fits your fin-goal.
The market will always recover. The goal is to find quality stocks with long term potential. It's hard for the average Joe to do this, because it involves following a lot of industry news, following up with earnings, etc. It's easier to invest through an advisor who knows how stuff works, and make rocket returns.
Investing in quality stocks with long-term potential is a good strategy, but it can be challenging for the average person to do this on their own. Keeping up with industry news and earnings can be time-consuming and difficult. That's why it's easier to work with an advisor who can help you make informed decisions and potentially achieve high returns.
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.
Annette Marie HoltAnnette Marie Holt is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Empower Financial Services. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
The economic crisis and downturn are all the signs of 2008 market crash 2.0, so my question is do I still save in the US dollar or is it okay to move all emergency and savings to precious metals??
In light of the ongoing global economic crisis, it is crucial for everyone to prioritize investing in diverse sources of income that are not reliant on the government. This includes exploring opportunities in stocks, gold, silver, and digital currencies. Despite the challenging economic situation, it remains a favorable time to consider these investments. Nevertheless, seeking guidance from an investment planner might be necessary if you desire a more assertive return.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
Great gains there! mind sharing details of your advisor please? i've started gaining more cash flow with my employment and looking at putting money into stocks and alternative assets that can help build wealth over time.
Stacy Lynn Staples is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
Thank you for this tip , I must say stacy, appears to be quite knowledgeable. After coming across her webpage, I thoroughly went through her resume, and I must say, it was quite impressive. I reached out to her, and I have booked a session with her.
Some economists have projected that both the U.S. , Australia and parts of Europe could slip into a recession for a portion of 2023. A global recession, defined as a contraction in annual global per capita income, is more rare because China and emerging markets often grow faster than more developed economies. Essentially the world economy is considered to be in recession if economic growth falls behind population growth.
My main concern now is how can we generate more revenue during quantitative times? I can't afford to see my savings crumble to dust.
It's a delicate season now, so you can do little or nothing on your own. Hence I’ll suggest you get yourself a financial expert that can provide you with valuable financial information and assistance
Very true! I've been able to scale from $50K to $189k in this red season because my Financial Advisor figured out Defensive strategies which help portfolios be less vulnerable to market downturns
How can I reach this adviser of yours? because I'm seeking for a more effective investment approach on my savings?
“Rebecca Nassar Dunne” has always been on the top of my list..She is regarded as a genius in her area and well knowledgeable about financial markets. I highly recommend you look her up if you want excellent collaboration.
5:45 - "Australia has a diversified economy"
9:19 - "Australia's economy lacks both diversification & sophistication"
diversified economy as in Australia's exports aren't focused on a single area. but lack diversification and sophistication because australia isn't doing anything to improve the quality of their products either for themselves or exports
Well atleast we don’t have school shootings
definitely noticed that. the script wasnt coherent. maybe written at different times or by different people. to make a gaff like that youd possibly even have parts that are plagiarised or AI generated.
They're both true, just in different matters.
I noticed this too, AI generated trash
I am a mechanical engineer working in manufacturing in Aus for last 20 years , can count at least 100 factories gone down because of red tape, unions, ultra high energy prices. We are dumb to sell coal to china so that they can run factories on cheap and we closed down our coal power plants which lead to manufacturing decline....
You’ve hit the nail on the head. Unfortunately we’ve had 30 years of declining interest rates, high immigration, a real estate and mining boom that has juiced our economy and left an entire generation thinking it’s just normal to get paid a six-figure salary while sitting around and basically doing FA. It’s going to be an almighty reality check for these people when the music stops.
@@joestjack Well looking at last 4 yrs I doubt the critical thinking of all Aussies. The way all lined up like sheep to get jabbed with poison. West in general has lost the ability to THINK. Its lost cause. People let it happen cause avg man doesnt care till his job is thretened. No one carea about who is in Canberra. So we are puppets of currupt system run by Elites of WEF. They wanna see a degenerate Australia. Thats what we have now. Footy beer pubs .....no innovation...just dig holes send to China....dumb nation
I'm a mechatronics grad and tbh I'm thinking of passing off to the USA because jibs are scarce and the only people really hiring are consulting companies who do sweet FA and get played by the gov.
Unions had nothing to do with Australian manufacturing over the last 20 years. Manufacturing unions were already decimated decades earlier. Competition from ultra low cost countries minimal import tariffs, high energy costs and regulation are much bigger factors.
@@Boababa-fn3mr I’m not so sure about that. From my house in Rockingham I can see the Alcoa Kwinana refinery which is currently closing down and the old BP refinery site which closed a few years ago. Both had strong aggressive unions who went on strike year after year because they thought they deserved higher pay, they wrapped the business in red tape and basically just took the piss. The people that used to work there were some of the laziest people I know yet thought the world owed them a six figure salary.
It’s impossible this wasn’t a factor in the company’s lack of profitability and subsequent decision to close.
So I definitely wouldn’t suggest that unions were the only reason we lost our manufacturing but they are certainly a factor and your statement that they had nothing to do with it I don’t think is correct.
I left Australia 15 years ago for Dubai. I had no idea I had an employee mindset until moving. Australians don't have the entrepreneurial mindset because the culture isn't there. I knew no one in Australia that though big. Australians identify with the aussoe battler or underdog swag man, this causes a tall poppy syndrome to occur when one tries to stand out. Not only do people look down on them for trying but the individual also faces huge guilt issues when going for success. Australians have mistaken submissiveness for humility. I fantasize about returning home however everytime I go back for holiday i realise it's not for me. It's just so stagnant. Beautiful but stagnant
Australia is run more like a mining project than a country!
Banks, consultants, big corps. mining giants... run this project (via bought out politicians) with profit optimization as their only driver.
This includes minimizing operational and maintenance expenses, aka public services, infrastructure, r&d, education, health, etc...while maximizing income from taxes, export of raw materials, and import of cheap labour....
Total disregard to the current and future welfare of the ordinary citizen and the environment.
Totally fair assessment
yes!
Well duh. That's why the westerners ethnically cleansed the natives.
Well, yeah.
Aside from mining, nothing else matters in Straya anymore. The population serves zero purpose in the global economy beyond supporting the mineral resources sector.
Also there’s a small casino on most street corners
Australia is NO LONGER the lucky country I can tell you that. When my parents and I arrived in the 90's it was, despite unemployment being 'high' it was the lucky country. Fuel - 40c per litre, Housing around 60k, full trolley of shopping
Why would the government care to think about the housing, infrastructure, and innovation or even expanding to the outer the city when you can put tax on cigarettes and alcohol. Who made cigarettes become underground for the black-market? $50 bucks for a pack of 25's and they're telling us that they are doing for us. What a joke!
If they care about our health then maybe put some incentives on fruit and veg. Soon the alcoho bizzo will bet burnt down too!
How are people supposed to own their own land? Youth crime is getting out of hand, only if these kids know how crime works overseas.
Rich and Dumb, yes!
Soon it will be Broken and and clueless.
Purchasing power hasn't kept up at all for average folk. They're lucky to have received 2% nominal pay rises per year, in the face of much higher inflation, especially in housing.
@@Boababa-fn3mrbut prices of cars, electronics and white goods have fallen dramatically compared to wages over the years.
@@RomanGolubev_A New tech should be deflationary, so they should have fallen, but they're not the biggest costs in our lives. But cars?
Yep this 110%. Australia is being destroyed unfortunately.
People try to predict the economy not realizing it is not a capitalistic market, its a command economy, central planning! my concern is, instead of having much dollar in bank that could lose value to inflation, do I save in gold to reserve and grow wealth for now, or just hang on?
truth is that gold serves as an inflation hedge in the long run, but not profitable in the short run. only thing you can predict is a strong effort of wealth transfer from the people to the powerful. luckily some folks find solution in financial advisors
Sure, investing is plain-sailing with the aid of an invt-specialist, thus I've always delegated my excesses ever since the rona-outbreak in January 2020 using a shrewd advisor, and my investments have compounded by at least 300%, summing up $820k ROI as of today.
this is incredible! how can I vet your advisor if you please? definitely would love to make money from the market too, but a complete newb..
There are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Aileen Gertrude Tippy’’ for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
Thanks a lot for this suggestion. I needed this myself, I looked her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.
I came to Australia back in 1995 , woked hard , had some deposite brought from overseas , bought my first house in year 2001 , for $198.000 . my weekly wages was about $650 . Today 25/07 /24 , my weekly wages is around $880 .same houst that I bought it's worth around $1.1 Million .
Australia was great , not anymore .
It's crap on every level, the worst mistake of my life was moving here. I hate the effing place, it really is dumb and dumber world
@@neilblackburn6869 I totally understand you champ . I've been here since 1995 , never felf like home and never will .but because my children were born here , and they didn't want to go any other country , I got stucked like you .
the country is full of idiots , and racist bastards .
@@neilblackburn6869you can always move elsewhere.
"but muh 18% interest rates!!!!! sure, the house only cost 4x my salary but it was still hard!!!!!!"
If you have been in Australia for so long and you're not even making a grand a week then you didn't make the right decisions. 880 was my weekly salary when I arrived in 2018. If you have any basic licences or tickets you can definitely make more money than 800 a week
Australia “was” a wonderful place to grow up, unfortunately progressively the country has been plundered by global corporations that pay little to NO TAX which successive governments have fostered. Australia is a very smart country, but with the recourses this country has the education system should be a priority but often struggles to be properly funded.
As we stand today our country struggles financially, successive governments have sold the “Farm”, most of our assets have been sold to foreign countries/ companies - even some of our water rights? Yes this may be somewhat simplistic, but in this day and age I believe we should be far better off!
Your understanding of the term "The Lucky Country" is wrong. It is a quote by Donald Horne to explain that Australia's economy seems to keep succeeding through decisions that would sink the economy of other countries. From his book: "Australia is a lucky country run mainly by second rate people who share its luck. It lives on other people's ideas, and, although its ordinary people are adaptable, most of its leaders (in all fields) so lack curiosity about the events that surround them that they are often taken by surprise."
Also, Australia managed to survive the GFC not because of the mining boom, but because of economic decisions by the PM & Treasurer of the time, including borrowing from China to keep spending going.
Correct about the Lucky Country. The decision by Rudd during the GFC suggests some of the leaders are not so mediocre, but that the same decision was taken during the pandemic instead of running a UBI experiment or doing what the Swedes did confirms Horne's concerns.
Rudds Generic wasteful QE would of just sunk the economy eventually without the Mining Boom and former savings.
unfortunately the ordinary people are just as uncurious as its leaders
Hello, I want to start investing, but I'm unsure where to start. Do you have any advice or contacts for assistance?
It's prudent to seek expert advice when creating a solid financial portfolio due to its complexities.
The truth is, you can't succeed without a reliable person like Naomi
Naomi's distinctive strength is her pragmatic approach, setting her apart from other brokers who often set unrealistic goals and fail to deliver
So, you all know her too? Her success story is everywhere!
If someone is straightforward and skilled in their work, people will always recommend them. I appreciate her honesty.
As a 71 year old Australia, I've watched our industry close, our society become more stratified over the last 50 years. I really don't like where we're heading.
Seriously considering alternatives.
Everyone is having a good living standard compared to worldwide. So there no urge for majority to risk their comfort to innovates something.
Try China.
@@DavidLockett-x4b Australia literally China back yard.
I am a born and bred Australian. Excellent video. A number of points well made, particularly around the selling of raw materials rather than doing some processing here and hence value-adding to create industries and jobs, and then selling that processed stuff for much more (ie dumb and getting dumber).
You missed a couple of points. By and large Australia is virtually giving away its resources. Our governments give overseas (and Australian) companies licences to mine, but then allow those companies to pay only pitiful royalties back into Australian coffers. For the amount of natural resources we have and the relatively low population we should be by far the richest per capita nation in the world. Yet we have homeless people and many people living below the poverty line. This is all because our govts kowtow to rich industrialists and give our wealth away to them in return for their personal and political support.
Another big miss in your video is around housing. We have a tax rort called 'negative gearing'. It is a shocking and unethical tax evasion scheme that encourages rich people to keep on buying property, which has now made it virtually impossible for regular a Australian to buy a home. It is disgraceful. Yet again, our govts won't end the scheme because they kowtow to the demands of the rich who donate to their political parties. It is corruption writ large.
There is a lot good in this country compared to many others, but like most western economies, our wealth is rapidly being concentrated into the hands of the rich few to the massive detriment of the majority average person who is struggling terribly with costs of living and housing. It is immoral what is going on here, and completely preventable if our govts weren't so weak and corrupt.
We could have the greatest and fairest and most 'looking after everyone' country in the world, but our spineless politicians over decades have buckled to the rich and screwed over the rest of us. Deplorable
Bang on! Imagine what Australia could have become if it had created a sovereign fund, like Norway...
Spot on!
thank you for your drill down comment Peter, about Australia, " The Lucky Country" and the reasons why we our becoming dummer - lack of innovation and home based industrial Industries.
Don't forget the capital gains tax discount - that's probably the bigger incentive to property investors. Australian politicians micromanage too much, too. Tax laws disincentivize efficient use of homeowner's spare rooms.
Don't forget the laziness of using mass immigration to keep GDP up, too (whilst suppressing per capita GDP).
@@saimoncole yes, i agree with all your excellent points, thank you!
We used to make things...... Australia 's manufacturing sector and thus our production capability was decimated after the federal government signed us up to the "Lima Declaration" without any public consultation in the 1970's. We agreed to wind down 30% of our production and to import it from overseas instead. This included primary produce like meat and fruit etc... The 30% disastrously blew out to a whopping 90% of production capacity gone....
A extremely rich country in natural resources.... Sounds like the middle east with their oil reserves.
But Australia has been governed so badly, and politicians are so short sighted that unfortunately the general public is now the biggest losers.
Australia should have free education, free healthcare, childcare, elder care etc etc etc.
No tolls on any roads, houses should be affordable and we should have very low income tax.
But none of this is true because we haven't managed our natural resources properly
So many whingets in oz go travel see how shit europe and divided states are then apologise for being a whinger livin in by far best country in the world
100% right but we sold of all our assets and don't profit .we given it all for free. How dumb fked are our politicians
Hard to thrive like the saudis when if we were to go solo America would just invade us and take it for themselves lol
@@Ryan95ishere that's a very good point. But do you see the USA invading an English speaking Christian country?
Yes all of that is caused by mining companies basically running our government, alongside other big business. We see next to no tax for all the profits these companies make off our natural resources. Our government has to be the most ineffective in the western world at helping its constituents. We are USA 2.0
We aren't wealthy, we just raised housing prices to unfathomable levels. And we have no true wealth generating assets other than homes.
People get rich in Australia through two means, hoarding housing or gambling.
Thank gvrt for inviting couple of thousand millionaires from overseas, triggering the biggest ponzi scheme in Australian history 😂
Well minimum wages in Australia still among the highest in the world, many innovative countries get lower paid compare to Australia. This is a question mark so Australian describe as rich and dumb.
Save more than you earn
This is gonna end badly.
In Australia, many tradies do much better than experienced professionals. There is no incentive for people to get higher qualifications. You can’t have a sophisticated economy when you operate like that.
Sad truth. Not that trades aren’t important, but rather that highly skilled professionals get paid so poorly. Why bother doing things that truly push the nation into the 21st century when you can make so much more on the tools.
@@teamtoken What makes you think tradies aren't more important and aren't skilled professionals? Do something useful and you might get more
@jaiacosta6025 such a bs comment. Try being useful in society, or fix your own window.
@futureoutfit Do you think a plumber and a rocket scientist are equally important? Both create same amount of wealth, and jobs for fellow citizens?
As a tradesman I think we are generally underpaid. The only ones who earn ok money do something extra like overtime, have their own business, specialise in something, 2 jobs etc
As an Aussie in my 20s trying to figure out my professional career, I don't see much of a future here. We export a lot of raw goods and accept many skilled immigrants, leaving a lot of Australians without opportunities. I studied applied physics but our research sector is critically underfunded, and if we had a bigger manufacturing industry I could at least look for interesting work there. I'd love to be working in green energy but that gets suppressed for obvious reasons. It seems better to just resign myself to something basic to pay the bills, but I'd really prefer to be doing highly innovative work and earning enough to actually afford a home. Our economy seems absolutely rigged against poorer, younger and - rather surprisingly - highly educated Australians.
And don't think that our government isn't corrupt, we give away natural gas to overseas companies for free and encourage the rich to speculate on housing. Foreign bribery is a massive issue right now.
Yup. You're not alone. It's also great having to pay out our university debts before you can even be considered for a home loan - which could potentially crash in value.
oh come on. Many Anglo-australian kids only want to have fun and go for the trades, most of the local students in the serious careers in Australian universities are children of immigrants. My son went to an expensive private school, most of his schoolmates ended up being tradies or sport related 'professionals' such as physiotherapists, sport movement specialists, etc and be at the beach at 3pm (very important). Stop complaining about skilled immigration, this is the sector who does the heavy lifting in the workforce.
@@muchachopicaronfalse, there is a massive shortage of tradesmen, and skilled immigration is unproductive as hell
Straya is going down and average folk in future generations are gonna find the buy in cost just isn't worth the reward in the end. Start looking elsewhere.
@@Boababa-fn3mr I meant real skilled migration not taxidrivers from Mumbai with pseudo-engineering degrees. I work in the mining sector in Perth, most of the brains behind the mega-projects are foreign educated and very skilled. Even overseas projects are engineered from Perth these days bringing hard currency to Australia in fees. You can fix taps yourself if you can’t find a plumber!
"Australia is a lucky country run mainly by second rate people who share its luck. It lives on other people's ideas, and, although its ordinary people are adaptable, most of its leaders (in all fields) so lack curiosity about the events that surround them that they are often taken by surprise"
Rs daddy come pull-up grrrrapow
Australia is rich:
John has 0 apples
David has 50 apples.
Each of them eat 25 apples in average!!
Is true or not for Au?!
@sandponics in case of Australia you dont need to be smart to get rich- inheritance solid base from parents and reasonable common sense where to invest money & not excessively use of drugs gambling and alcohol.
The LNG income tax from exports by Australia is very low.
Qatar has free health care, education and universities based on their LNG tax on exports.
Australia has limited government healthcare and education is not free.
Government not clever at all -outsmarted by almost all foreign companies.
Australia also allows foreign ownership of real estate-this has led to ridiculous price increases for home ownership, making it unaffordable for people to buy a home.
No longer the “lucky country” 🤷♂️
Goverment not outsmarted, politicians bought and sold to provide low tax enviroment
Aussie who has owned and run businesses here, Japan and Thailand as well as worked in China and South Korea. Based on that experience, I’ll never run another in Australia, … the red tape here is unbelievable and the tax/endless government charges out of control. It’s simply not worth it, easier to do it elsewhere.
Same here… closed up, left the country and started my next company OS. Not worth it in Aus
Same here too.
Asia is far easier .
Harder to run business in Australia than Japan?
That's sad to here
Hear
Sadly the colder version of Australia - Canada, is becoming poorer and dumber.
It seems to be the curse of a lot of developed countries. NZ, France, Sweden, Spain, US all and more in varying degrees.
@@adityagupta7525 Canada is a great example of where Australia is headed 😄 at least Canada is next to the US. Australia is next to …NZ?!
@@trails3597 economically US is nowhere in club of other. It's companies, industries and markets are exceptional. Inequality is there no sure but from a country perspective US is in a different league.
@@siddharthgoyal4008no healthcare.😂
@@CountingStars333this is irrelevant to a company’s economic performance.
For all of the crap it gets, the us economy is extremely robust compared to the rest of the world
Excellent summary and here's the money quote: "Australia's entire economic strategy hinges on just two things: selling houses and extracting resources from the ground". Yip, and the politicians don't seems to want to mess with this 'sound' strategy, seeing as it has worked well enough so far. They'd rather wait until it fails and blame the other party and literally anyone else before setting about doing anything to change it.
With an economy based largely on selling real estate and extracting resources from the ground, and with low productivity and low investment in R&D, Australia looks very much like Canada.
As an Australian I cannot fault the logic behind this commentary and overview of our country. Additionally, as a member of a team that has developed a new disruptive lifesaving technology that is being manufactured in-country, I, along with others in our team have been staggered by the ignorance and lack of support received by both governments and institutions thereby making our project far more difficult by comparison to other progressive thinking nations.
Just go to America. Loads of cash and boundless opportunities.
The government is owned by foreign interests
Can you please elaborate? What issues did you face?
@@johnhaines8752 I posted a reply to you, but it's gone. I criticised the government. I wonder who would censor my comments
What is it? Is there ways for people to invest?
We are overly fixated on the idea that the economy will collapse. In reality, the economy cycles and always recovers, so I don't really care what the forecasts are; all I want is to increase my portfolio. I've read that some people are making enormous profits in spite of the recession. Do you have any advice on how they manage this?
I think it's the professionals and those who use their services that are really pulling in the big money right now. There are really advisors that can help you achieve very consistent growth. I have a friend who pulled in more than $194k profit within three months. So you just have to make some research and get one who fits your fin-goal.
The market will always recover. The goal is to find quality stocks with long term potential. It's hard for the average Joe to do this, because it involves following a lot of industry news, following up with earnings, etc. It's easier to invest through an advisor who knows how stuff works, and make rocket returns.
Investing in quality stocks with long-term potential is a good strategy, but it can be challenging for the average person to do this on their own. Keeping up with industry news and earnings can be time-consuming and difficult. That's why it's easier to work with an advisor who can help you make informed decisions and potentially achieve high returns.
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.
Her name is Annette Christine Conte can't divulge much. Most likely, the internet should have her basic info, you can research if you like
Errrr as a 38yo Aussie I'm 5 minutes in and REALLY scratching my head. So much of this isn't true. We get so rorted by the resources companies who pay so little in taxes back to the Australian people.
We're not all rich, but definitely agree with the dumb and getting dumber!
Individuals aren't all rich but the overall Australian economy is.
Even received minimum wages in Australia, that was higher than most of the countries.
a lot of the resource companies are run by australian people.... ie gina
My husband and I were fortunate enough to be able to pay off our mortgage early. We were both still working, and took the payment amount that we had been using to pay off our mortgage faster and we put it straight into investments. We were able to retire early because of almost 7 years of putting away what would have been our mortgage payment as well as maxing out our 401K/403B plans. Thankfully we were taught by both of our parents the value of living within our means. Thank you for your advice. I know it will help people. we are interested in investments that could set me up for retirement , I mean I've heard of people that netted hundreds of thousands during these crash, I listened to someone on a podcast who earned over $650K in less than a year, what's the strategy behind such returns?
Investing without proper guidance can lead to mistakes and losses. I've learned this from my own experience.If you're new to investing or don't have much time, it's best to get advice from an expert.
Even with the right strategies and appropriate assets, investment returns can differ among investors. Recognizing the vital role of experience in investment success is crucial. Personally, I understood this significance and sought guidance from a market analyst, significantly growing my account to nearly a million. Strategically withdrawing profits just before the market correction, I'm now seizing buying opportunities once again.
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.
Deborah Lynn Dilling is the licensed advisor I use.Just research the name. You'd find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment
She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran an online search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
00:07 Australia's economy is rich due to natural resources
02:10 China's demand for raw materials fueled Australia's iron ore exports boom.
04:05 Australia's economy grew due to migration and resource management
06:28 Australia's economic growth is fueled by immigration (asians mainly then europeans)
08:31 Australia's economy is rich but lacking in diversification and sophistication
10:39 Australia's low productivity growth is hindering its economy.
12:47 Rapid urbanization in Australia strains housing affordability.
14:46 Australia's economy heavily relies on housing and resource extraction.
Crafted by Merlin AI?
Great summary.
So what should be done to capitalise on these to make Australia able to perform like SoKor, Japan or S'pore? Looks like China is Australia's quick cash cow (or cash panda?) which cannot be ignored. The elected persons to lead the nation must emphasise more on nation building than on politicking or self-enrichment. Bipartisan efforts, perhaps?
Australia rode on the back of China and Asian immigration but shuns Asians as backwatered and poverty, treats immigrants like second class when the economy is strong. Now with inflation and weakening economy, Australia calls out for its government to give them money to maintain their expensive lifestyle but refuses to work for menial dollars and blames Asian immigration for taking up all their remaining houses (thereby putting up rent and property prices). An island of mediocrity
Houses and holes. That’s the complexity of the Australian economy.
that's what i always say too aus economy is a housing ponzi scheme with a mining side hustle
You forgot "Hoes"🤣
What about agriculture?
@@oliversissonphone6143 Western Australia is the largest producer of carrots in the country!😁😁
Don't forget gambling, so much gambling.
Australia's economic complexity has declined significantly. Thousands of people now need to find other sources of income because of the constantly shifting economic realities globally. Its not just in Australia! I'm personally looking to the stock market to help me reach my $2 million retirement goal, but I'm worried about the recent market fall
Buying a stock is easy, but buying the right stock without a time-tested strategy is incredibly hard. hence I will suggest you get yourself a financial-Advisor that can provide you with entry and exit points on best stocks to buy now or put on a watchlist.
Absolutely! I don't have the time to carefully evaluate my investments and research particular stocks because of my hectic work schedule. I have therefore hired a financiiaI advisr to actively manage my portfolio for the last seven years in order to adjust to the state of the market. I've been able to successfully traverse the financial environment by using this method to make well-informed judgements about when to buy and sell. Maybe you ought to think about taking a similar strategy.
That's really quite amazing. I would like to modify my financial situation this year as well, so I could use some information on your FA.
@@readwell123 It would be highly innovative to find an FA who can help you shape your portfolio, such as *Elizabeth Colleen Nurre* .
@@readwell123 its needed to get through the challenging times that lie ahead, careful personal money management will be crucial.
Can't disagree with anything has been said considering i have lived my whole life in Sydney. People say Australia is a fair and equal opportunity country but they never mention how corrupt the Australian government is at all levels of government. Probably the worse governments in the world that has exploited the countries resources for decades so they can fill up their offshore bank accounts.
I will say this again and again: Australia is a country with Third-world political dynamics and First-world standards of living.
I have no doubt that Future generations will be paying for the crony policies of Past governments.
This is the same thing that is happening in Canada. Rich in resources dumb in Economy which is why both countries have speculative real estate bubbles.
@@ngoctruongpaulnguyen6503 let’s not leave NZ out of the Dumb Club 😄
Perhaps we shouldn't ignore the fact our housing prices are high because a lot of people also want to move here to live, because it's a better place to live than most of the world.
@@tsubadaikhan6332 High immigration is only one of many factors that has resulted overpriced housing here.
@@tsubadaikhan6332 we're definitely not ignoring that fact, it's not just the demand side but the supply side as well. My point stands that for sustained economic growth, relying on real estate property values as a retirement fund is not ideal.
@@lindsaysmith8119The demand side coming from extremely high immigration levels that aren’t sustainable is the biggest factor. If you looked at 2020 and early 2021, the rental and housing costs decreased due to the lockdowns which reduced immigration.
One of the most impressive aspects of Michael Hugh Terpin trading prowess is his keen understanding of market dynamics. He possesses a deep knowledge of various cryptocurrencies, their underlying technologies, and the broader economic factors influencing their value. This comprehensive understanding enables him to make well-informed investment decisions that consistently yield positive returns.
Furthermore, Michael Hugh Terpin’s trading strategy is marked by a disciplined approach and a focus on risk management. He employs a diverse range of analytical tools and techniques to identify lucrative trading opportunities while mitigating potential risks. This meticulous approach has not only safeguarded my investments but has also generated substantial profits over time.
*HE'S ALWAYS ACTIVE ON TELEGRAMS*
*@michaeltpin*
It's a miracle and I would testify, $110,000 every 4 weeks! I now have a big mansion and can now afford anything and also support God's work and the church
*what s a p*
Australia is no different from any Middle East oil country. The only difference is Australia is in the middle of the Pacific. That is it. Selling resources.
Excellent analysis and reporting.
There's been no long term strategic plan for Australia since Keating. ('91-96)
Countries like South Korea have half the tax revenue per capita of Australia and yet they have managed to transition their economies.
Australia had the opportunity to transition primary industry to renewables to the point of becoming a net energy exporter to a regional market of over half a billion end consumers and did nothing.
There are obvious sinkholes in federal and state budgets where money just 'disappears' without being properly accounted for by GAAP standards.
A lot of Australians are left wondering WHERE DO THE TAX DOLLARS REALLY GO? It certainly doesn't seem to go towards its own security like future proofing of maintaining the long term standard of living of tax payers.
Most politicians seem to struggle with doing their day jobs let alone the work that needs to be done.
So I think we can say the days of the mid 20th century moniker 'The Lucky Country' are well and truly over.
'The Lost Country' is more accurate.
At least half the comments from Australians here relate to them individually not collectively. I mean QED.
She'l be right mate.
Some points you overlooked include Australia's strong and in many Ag industries, world leading producers. True that these industries are restrained by the urbane folies you described.
However, as a technology leader in this sector, with good resource management and an excellent capacity to grow, Australia can (and I hope), will recover from the Canadian disease you have described
Australia has this real bad case of tall poppy syndrome which we use as a means of keeping eachother humble/grounded, but the truth is in many ways it stifles our innovation and often see's our best minds immigrate to the USA or Europe where there are more opportunities. It exists within every industry... no doubt
Exactly
And over weighed by the tall poppy syndrome mostly owing more than they actually own....hence the governments Trillion dollar debt.
Believe me we are not rich you may see that figure being so high but go to a supermarket and realise what cost $5 in the USA costs $15 in Australia (AU rates there). We may make alot on paper but that means nothing when everything costs as much as more than most other nations.
Electrican makes $AUD 56/hour. Pharmacist makes $AUD 50/hour. Don't waste your time with an education & HECs (student loan) debt in Australia
All I see pharmacists doing is printing out paper, going to the shelf and handing over a drug in a white coat.
@@chopsmith4712 So if the doctor writes your prescription for paxlovid and you're on amiodarone. I hope your white coat pharmacist just hands you the medication.
@@chopsmith4712 If your doctor writes you a script for Paxlovid whilst you're on Amiodarone. I hope your white coat pharmacist just hands you the medication.
@@chopsmith4712 If your doctor writes your a script for ciprofloxacin whilst you're on Amiodarone. I hope your white coat pharmacist just hands you the medication.
@@woox200sx Pharmacist job sounds ripe for replacement by an AI. Can catch conflicts in meds, can read, process and generate paper work, can probably even read doctors hand writing better ;D. Bots can fetch and package meds...
This is a fair summary tbh. You understate the housing problem though - it is catastrophic. Middle-class people in fulltime work are living in their cars because there are either no available rentals, or the greedy investor landlords are raising rents beyond reach. People can't plan a life nor have children if they don't have stable nor fairly priced housing. There have been warnings about lack of skills for decades. Australia's impending dire situation is a symptom - the disease is government after government grasping while in office and not thinking beyond its three-year term. Leaders have failed us.
Each successive government seems determined to ride our once in a lifetime opportunity into the ground with nothing real to show for it but massively overinflated housing prices. The "lucky country" was a poke at how we've been successful so far despite some very questionable economic management.
This is all sadly very true, spot on. I hope our government wakes up!
As an Aussie this is extremely well researched. Maybe don’t agree 100% on every statement but you’re pretty damn close overall.
FYI regarding builders going bankrupt - the issue is actually in Australia they do fixed price contacts, so when the inflation spike hit, builders had the choice to either do the project at a loss or go bankrupt. They need to change to laws to allow for price ratcheting.
Why can’t we build more homes? #1 is absolutely nimbyism and cultural. If you live in an apartment, like people will think you’re poor and “how unfortunate for you.” This is a cultural problem. And classic, every nice neighbourhood in Sydney they don’t wanna ruin the community feel or whatever it’s actually very perverse. My folks are in this category.
The 2nd bit is also cultural but skilled tradespeople are looked down upon in our society. Despite the fact young tradies are earning mega bux > 100k when the average uni grad is making like 70k (with student debt). Every kid gets drilled into them go to uni, and guess what, now we have a bazillion useless commerce grads and no skilled tradies. Also people don’t wanna study stem.
I am the only person I know who became a software developer (never met a developer in Australia outside a professional context like at my rugby club or in a bar or whatever) and I moved to USA lol way better opportunities
Excellent insights, and cultural stigma of the trades is very strong in the US as well.
Alongside fixed price contracts, considering that so many construction companies got washed out in 2021 and 2022, do you feel that the government response to the pandemic had an impact on the construction companies?
@@iramunn9611 I am an immigrant here in the US and have lived in Canada and Denmark so I am by no means anti migration but the issue was compounded by the fact when all these new housing starts got canned, they also accelerated immigration to catch up for the lack of it during COVID and the supply and demand equation just got so fucked up. No new housing but 100s of 1000s who are expecting to live somewhere. It’s just poor policy on multiple levels.
An idea would be to target the skilled migration specifically towards, I dunno, people who work in construction?
What also does not help (at least in NSW) is they allowed the construction industry to self regulate for a while so a number of very low quality apartment buildings went up and later on these building became legally uninhabitable due to structural faults (opal tower, mascot tower etc) and all the apartment owners got left holding the bag. I think there was a warranty period but it was short. This has scared people off of buying an apartment and having a stronger preference for existing stock.
So it’s a confluence of issues
On point re: the NIMBYism. But i would also add housing and strata law on that. There are many people who are willing to live in apartments, though not by first choice over houses, it’s the basic rules of not allowing pets to live in apartments, not allowing to wash your car on common driveway because there’s none provided, not allowing to party after 10pm, not allowing to install a door on your balcony without strata’s approval. Australia has become the land of nanny states we might as well give ourselves the moniker China-lite and install CCTVs at every road intersection. Look at Sydney, it’s become a ghost town due to the lock-out law because of a few incidents. Yes it was unfortunate and sad but you can’t make everyone suffer coz of a few. And now they want to fine you if you don’t wear your seatbelt properly. If people don’t want to cherish their life, then let them. They need to be responsible for themselves and let them suffer the consequences if they don’t. Govt should stop trying to be “we know better and it’s for your own good”. Rants over. Thanks for listening.
I don't think trades people are being looked just because they do trade, it has more to do with they are usually associated gambling and drinking.
100k+ but without super, annual leaves, sick leaves etc is practically the same as 70k
Prior to 1975 Australia manufactured everything required and exported excess.
Then the government signed us up to the Lima agreement and the downward spiral began thanks to the U.N.
People are all talk until they compare prices in Bunnings.
Australians were paying AAA prices for B grade products because of Union protectionism and Gov't subsidies.
@@HeiseSays That I can't deny, all I'm saying is we once made affordable, quality products.
You had the greatest immigration policy in the West until the 70s.
@@HeiseSays nailed it.
Fantastic video! I have incurred so much losses trading on my own....I trade well on demo but I think the real market is manipulated.... Can anyone help me out or at least tell me what I'm doing wrong??
Same here, My portfolio has been going down the drain while I try trading,l just don't know what I do wrong. .
Investing with an expert is the best strategy for beginners and busy investors, as most failures and losses in investment usually happen when you invest without proper guidance. I'm speaking from experience.
I think l'm blessed if not I wouldn't have met someone who is as spectacular as expert mrs Janet..
Highly recommended🙌
Wow, I'm surprised to see Janet mentioned here as well. I didn't know she had been kind to so many people
I'm also a huge beneficiary of her..
I thought myself and my family were
the only ones enjoying Janet
trade benefits
Thank you for beginning the video with what Australia is because we all had no idea up until now.
Good presentation,but I was surprised the Norway comparison wasnt made.
Good video. Some points (housing bias):
1. Australia survived the GFC primarily because Kevin Rudd (Prime Minister) increased net immigration circa 10% inside his first term (unprecedented). This kept house prices from falling (the GFC was a housing price issue in other countries).
2. Universities dropped their education standards, so that immigrants could flow into the country.
3. Corruption in politics and inside universities is such that Landlording is the main way average Australian's are getting richer.
4. Because Landlording is prolific in Australia, the rate of owner-occupation is decreasing and Landlording (renting) is outpacing Owner-Occupation.
5. Corruption by politicians protecting their real estate portfolios is prolific in Australia.
6. The rate of development of new stock is less than the rate of Landlording. In other words Landlords are cannibalising their neighbours and the race is on the see who owns the most property, making it harder for families to start and first home buyers.
7. Australia does not have strong manufacturing sector! Correct - we are ranked 82nd on complexity. But manufacturing ended when we floated our currency decades ago. We don't make anything sophisticated.
8. Our natural born rate is low because housing costs are so high. Because immigration is too high. Because politicians and universities and Landlording has outpaced new building stock and consumer protection of owner-occupation.
For example, as at 10th September, the average house price in Perth (Western Australia) increased 20% in the past 12 months! That is an inflationary disgrace, but because politicians and academics (and others) are Landlords the effects and affects of this are muted in the media.
When Landlording is greater than Owner-Occupation , renting increases, and the quality of life declines. I simply don't accept the broad brush statements that the quality of living in Australia is as good as it was 20 years ago when housing was more affordable relative to wages.
Landlording is why Australia and other countries will continue to have a poorer standard of living despite the 'traditional matrix boring economists use to 'measure' quality of life'.
We need to change the real estate incentives to where owner-occupation and new stock development is far more profitable than Landlording of existing properties.
Local planning rules have bugger all to do with why house prices are high. Compared to the abovementioned, it's just not worth mentioning that local planning rules have any measurable effect on house prices. Rather, the incentives for Landlording are far greater the incentives to become and builder or developer. Why develop (literally create new stock) your way to wealth, when one can just go to a bank and buy an existing property in an established location and rent it out to the immigrants and poorer persons?
Landlords outbidding potential owner-occupiers for the same stock (ie landlords converting potential owner-occupier stock to rental stock) is the cancer infecting the West.
Bankrolling Landlording, instead of Developing Brand New Stock, and associated incentives, is the problem of the West.
Australia may be rich but majority of its people are suffering on most levels. Australia needs to bring back manufacturing.
Im punjabi, nice to meet you
majority aren't suffering, it's those who has no generational wealth and are either young or recent migrants. the older australians are laughing their way to the bank.
We are not lucky in Australia. We have 9.000 people who have no place to live. Only the street we need to build more houses for people who are in low income families who have been priced out of the market. And our young people don't won't to work. Most of our young people are on Drugs. This is a big problem.i.dont see anything that makes us lucky.
Buying a stock is easy, but buying the right stock without a time-tested strategy is incredibly hard. Hence what are the best stocks to buy now or put on a watchlist? I’ve been trying to grow my portfolio of $560K for sometime now, my major challenge is not knowing the best entry and exit strategie;s ... I would greatly appreciate any suggestions.
Investing without proper guidance can lead to mistakes and losses. I've learned this from my own experience.If you're new to investing or don't have much time, it's best to get advice from an expert.
A lot of folks downplay the role of advlsors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember couple summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to help my business stay afloat, hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation, from $275k to $850k.
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you. I will be retiring in two years and I might need some management on my much larger portfolio. Don't want to take any chances.
Svetlana Sarkisian Chowdhury is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment..
Thank you for this tip. it was easy to find your coach. Did my due diligence on her before scheduling a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her résumé.
The comment abou transparent approval processes and no corruption is demonstrably false. Australia has an extremely opaque lobbying industry and continues to sneak in approvals for mineral projects despite a commitment to reduce emissions. Even though we might not be flagrantly corrupt in the same way as developing nations the pocket padding of politicians and their interests on both sides of the two major parties is still there.
Hopefully we’ll mature as a nation to reap the benefits of our natural resources and avoid pointless posturing.
@@HeiseSayswe already have and continue to do so.
It’s thanks to those minerals you’ve got the way of life in Australia that you do
Not true. Labor’s support for gas was part of their election platform.
What? Your talking down corruption. Mate you have no idea what's going on then. Not as corrupt as developing nations?? Australia is far more corrupt. Yes there' regulations and government agencies to enforce them, but tell me a single case that actually mattered and made a difference? The recent ACCC sandal underpins how corrupt Australia is. Anz bought Suncorp's banking arm, even though the ACCC blocked the deal initially. The acting treasurer overturned the ACCC decision? The case they made was very strong too. It was in direct breach of anti-competition laws mate. Explain that one please?
Vancouver BC and all of Canada are very similar: everything based on immigration & natural resources, lots of red tape and mediocrity but not the outright corruption of the 3rd world. It does infuriate me that our provincial government takes away our property rights to encourage more housing, but does nothing to improve zoning & reduce red tape. I'm pretty sure it's the same Down Under. PS: great videos on YT about how building code changes can totally revolutionize apartment buildings & double housing.
It's called the lucky country because you must be lucky if you can survive here not because the country itself is lucky.
And I'm sure the largest export is education not mining...
Big mining companies are profiting, the government is hardly taxing them. Give "Punter's Politics" a follow.
"Every time a kiwi emigrates to Aussie the IQ of both countries goes up." Rob Muldoon NZ PM. It's the age old problem: good times makes men weak in the head.
Lets be honest, if it wasn't for Asians migrating here, us Aussies would score lower in productivity, entrepreneurship and academically. One huge issue is that our news isn't free. Most 1st world countries have free news. Let it be online or tv. In Australia our tv news is full of commercials or garbage sponsored content and our online media are behind paywalls.
@@dddddddd5555 not anymore though
@@dddddddd5555 For a fake Asian on a new trolling account just to flame, your English is sublime.
@@dddddddd5555 Ahh you're one of those.... Fine to fuck and eat their food but nothing else eh. Keep creating accounts to incense Asian hatred.
Fascism
Be Smart. Be organized. Be lucky like Australia. - Econ, 2024.
My daughter and son-in-law returned home after failing to fund reasonable jobs in Australia. They did very well in a top Australia university but had no future there.
What did they study if I may ask?
As long as Australia remains politically dependent on the US, it's future's going to look bleaker and bleaker. Remember, a great deal of Australia's much vaunted 'luck' depends on its not poking the Chinese panda in the eyes.
What does the US have to do with anything. This is a failure of Australias own making.
we poke and they block our trade, then a couple of years later unblock it. So we had the last laugh
What does America have to do with this? The sad state of affairs is Australians own doing.
@@teamtoken china supporter havin a dig, nothing new
The US is a minor problem compared to China.
What you're suggesting is counterintuitive. Australia needs to reduce Chinese migration and real estate investment and reduce its economic dependence on China.
As manufacturing diversifies across more countries, China's share will decrease. Other countries will become bigger customers of Australian natural resources.
Who is responsible for driving innovation? The citizens, the government, industry? Regardless of which political party you vote for, you want the government to strengthen the economy and increase individual prosperity. Government is responsible for funding science and technology. Government is where the levers are to direct and regulate industry. In Australia, we seem to have a political system ingeniously designed to 'take the easy option' when it comes to making difficult or unpopular decisions, regardless of how those decisions may improve the country.If any facet of our country is in desperate need of innovation, it is our system of governance.
You left out a couple of key points:
- Most mining companies that operate in Australia are foreign owned so apart from a marginal tax, the profits go offshore.
- When the government decided to privatise the assets the majority went overseas.
To make things worse there is a culture in the workplace to basically do as little as possible without being noticed and that’s only getting worse with the next generations of workers.
Tall poppy syndrome
What about the fact we can’t afford anything nowdays, the price of food and houses are fast surpassing our wages but work places can’t afford to pay us more, which is an imbalance. Most of us are becoming poorer , the numbers of money doesn’t actually go to most of us anymore but even taking away , so we are becoming poorer
Speak for yourself. Maybe live within your means or earn more.
@@futureoutfit don't be a dunce. Money is being funnelled up to the ultra wealthy, in every country.
This is what happens to countries who blindly follow and obey America's every order. Australia should make decisions for themselves. Instead of making China the enemy maybe focus on benefiting financially from it. Besides military America provides Australia with nothing for the everyday person. We should be neutral country were we build cooperation with all countries that can benefit Australia yet still stand up to ourselves if that country is trying to manipulate us
I'm a millennial Australian. This is a perfect description of my experience.
I think Australia has one silenced problem - she's an extension of Western Europe just like the Americas. However, whereas the Americas are an ocean away from Europe, Australia is 2 oceans and 2 continents away. The fact that, with the exception of New Zealand, all her neighbours are poor doesn't help either.
We will have some problems when china goes into a recession.
i think China literally carried her economy for the last 20 years.if u looked at the graph of her gdp growth, it rose steadily throughout the 20th century, but the minute China truly opened up and joined the WTO in 2001, australia's gdp curve along with the rise of china went parabolic. australia exports more than 100 billion in resources a year to china and is one of the only handful of countries in the world with a trade surplus with China, not to mention half the students fueling her 36 billion a year education industry is made up of China students and all that chinese money pouring into Australia real estate the last 15 years.....
australia is more or less a vassal of China, that is when shes not a vassal of US.
Not a vassal of China as a vassal does everything the lord tells it to do. In fact China tried to destroy Australia by imposing trade tariffs on Australian exports when Australia called for a covid investigation but China did not impose sanctions on Australian iron ore and in the end it was China who came back to Australia desperate for Australian coal.
This is definitely a factor, Australia is part of the western world but on the other side of the globe
@@robertruggiero9999 considering how crucial china was to australia's economic prosperity, not just prosperity, her stratospheric growth and success in the 21st century whether or not the ordinary australian people understood or grasp the extend of it, while america did practically nothing at all except demand her to participate in some ridiculous 64 billion submarine deal in a show of "solidarity".....i mean CHina is literally australia's largest trading partner at nearly 299 billion USD while america is barely 78 billion...and in australia's media china is painted and portrayed as this bogeyman and enemy of the state or even pinko commies like where do people come off? where do u find such politicians lmao.
and when people get angry and retaliate after much constraint for u to pretend to be the victim and being "bullied" i cant imagine in any other universe or reality would anyone even dare to treat their biggest benefactor with such an attitude......
hey u could at least be a man or country of principle and values and just say no to everything if u dont want China's money, 300 billion in trade plus all those billions chinese dumps in australian "education" racket and real estate......no need to be a hypocrite just for money.
oh well cant blame them, australians are anglo saxons after all.....UK US and australia......would u expect them not to?although australia i would say is not as bad as UK and US together....
and well i also understand the anxieties when some other country or people especially that is not of ur kind starts playing a more and more prominent role and greater influence in economics and global politics....although u people seem to have no problem when the world and countries like singapore or Japan subjugated or submitted themselves to the west.....
humans will be humans
seeing how quickly australia was to fall in lock step with america playing the piped piper in this campaign of anti china sentiments and hate and vitrol....
Who would have thought Aussie Little Brother NZ would be so innovative and send a rocket into space... Since Aussie is very capable of doing that.
Who remembers those merry go rounds that as children we climbed on and spun until those on the inside stayed on and those on the edge fell off? Well, you better make sure you are frugal and stay off the edge because a lot who are not are going to get flung off real quick real soon 😢
Bullshit about the resource mining. Government sells us out in it especially offshore drilling. Making Japan rich.
Owning a house lets you exist, not be rich!
I've been here in Australia for 30 years. Urban sprawl is unsustainable.
Australian love of houses, and negative gearing. Tradies' love of the Imported Utes, etc, [bigger and noiser the better], and the workers' paradise that is still Australia.
As an Australian, i think most the stuff in the video is spot on.
the problems I see with Australia's economy is:
1) export, it is slowing down because China's development boom is slowing down. Maybe India will replace China for export of Iron ore and other materials? idk how long this will last, eventually the export rally will slow down.
2) houses/apartments prices are ridiculously high (Sydney is currently ranked 2nd most unaffordable place behind Hongkong, and we are not even a top tier financial center country like Hongkong or US). we are in a weird situation that we need immigrants to fill jobs such as construction to provide housing supply, but more immigrants also drive the demand of housing causes housing to be more unaffordable for Australian. Me earning 100k+ aud, i feel like it takes forever to save up for upfront payment for a mortgage given the rent is high. The boomers who bought their properties early are sitting on loads of equity (rich just get richer)
3)education - we have a lot of international students which they pay crazy amount of tuition fees (good for us), however, this also drive the demand of housing. In addition, I have seen a lot of local Australian complain that some of the international students compete with the locals for jobs after they graduate, which the competition causing the goal post of owning a property even further away.
In conclusion, I do think Australia as of now is one of the best country to live in, even with those problems above. open to discussion, keen to hear everyone's perspective.
Anti immigrant sentiment that is so widespread at the moment is wildly exaggerated and a mere excuse of the politicians to fool uneducated people; housing crisis can be solved by regulating the rampant gig economy in real estate like air bnb.. and by making new houses (not rocket science, is it?)...the current argument in Australia - I want international students' money to fund my hecs and their labour to run my business but I don't want them to stay in a house is an argument that crosses all limits of greed and foolishness.
As a former graduate student of this beautiful country, it hurts to watch this analysis because there is so much truth in it. Without the vast resources and housing speculation, Australians will become poor until the next generation of hungry migrant’s seize up the opportunity and change Australia
We are not rich we are poor housing wealth is not rich we are income poor, yeah we have commodities but we get nearly 0 royalties from it. Gas we pay more than most countries even tho we are the 2 or third biggest exporter. This country is rich for the rich not for an average this is a poor country with high asset values not high income we are cash poor. Most are
I can go on and on but believe me this country is a Ponzi scheme and not a rich country. Look at births look at income tax as part of government income look at house prices to income. Look at energy expense against the world. We suck !
I have recently returned to australia after more than 2 decades overseas. The house prices here are ridiculous, especially in Sydney. Glad im set up overseas for retirement as im not going to be staying here permanently. I totally agree with the video ending that there is no clear plan for australia's future and any plan that private sector has gets virtually no support from the govt. With so much land couldnt aust be a green energy exporter using high voltage dc submarine cables. But with no support from the govt and only private sector funding. It just wont happen.
Im 28, live in Perth WA and thank god im in the mining industry. I can afford to invest in US stocks and at least ill be ok. Gen z here is screwed though. Unless they have major wealth passed down or manage to get a job with a competitive salary.
@@willchongwei what US stocks?
I’ve got in S&P500 and it’s done well. I missed Nvidia though. Thought about it back in 2019 but didn’t pull the trigger. Dumbest mistake 🤦🏻♂️
@teamtoken I don't want to give personal advice. I can only tell you what I've done. I've DCA'd into companies I understand and think will continue revenue growth. I've done my research, and I'm not concerned about dips in the market.
Semiconductor/Technology are my main holdings.
NVDA
AVGO
TSM
Goog
META
AMZN
PLTR
After that
VISA
MASTERCARD
S&P 500 through IVV ASX
Good luck
Go that lime green colour for sure !!!
What colour are going on the hardtop ??? That thing is going to be awesome !!! Are you supercharging it ?
Australia is good country 🎉
We should proud of that
We should help each other in society
Learn to speak English properly!
Aussies also tend to get hysterical over little things and almost always blame foreigners. Despite getting rich off foreigners.
Many in Australia have been getting poorer because the price for basic things like housing and groceries has inflated so much
Almost every problem you mention in this video can be put down to international companies owning monopolies, and the gullibility of the people to listen to these companies. The comparison to south korea is the best example of this, we had a vision, it was called the NBN, but outside interests made sure that didn't happen. A diversified economy isn't good for foreign owned monopolies trying to extract maximum wealth from Australia.
Still, Australia is in better shape than the UK today. So ... curiously, is it possible that the UK's monarch be relocated to Australia ?
Australian universities are more interested in DEI than developing technologies and combined with a poor entrepreneurial culture it is not surprising that Australia has fallen behind after advanced economies.
Its not "DEI" 🙄🙄 its creating a new industry by taking money from rich iinternationals that want prestige
@ashmd4537 It is legal in Australia to advertise academic jobs and exclude people based on sex and ethnicity from applying (it is always white men being excluded). This is now common practice. The biggest public funder now approportions 50% of grants to women regardless of the number who apply all the quality of grants compared to those from men. DEI- Didn't Earn It, and in this case the long term effects on the quality of Australian academia will be disastrous.
@@davidlea-smith4747- DEI is basically just an anti-WM policy.
Wish the same could be said about the American economy, more and more people might face a tough time in retirement. Low-paying jobs, inflation, and high rents make it hard to save. Now, middle-class Americans find it tough to own a home too, leaving them without a place to retire.
The increasing prices have impacted my plan to retire at 62, work part-time, and save for the future. I'm concerned about whether those who navigated the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am currently experiencing. The combination of stock market volatility and a decrease in income is causing anxiety about whether I'll have sufficient funds for retirement.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
Being heavily liquid, I'd rather not reinvent the wheel. Since this strategy works for you, how can I contact your advisor?
Sharon Ann Meny is the licensed advisor I use. Just search the name. You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment.
Thank you for the lead. I searched her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.
The funny thing about Australia is that a lot of university educated people Want to live here. So we end up with lots of engineers from developing countries managing products which are then made in said developing countries. The manufacturing doesn’t count as Australian according to economic statistics but the knowledge is here.
Lies again? American Education Harvard University
its just college students regurgitating textbook knowledge that is already available everywhere in the world, but if u ask if australia can actually make or build anything, it is clear even from their automobile industry back in the 60s 70s and 80s....that its tragically a resounding NO.
The tragedy is that governments in developing countries can't get their business together so the frustration of living in those kinds of societies just puts off educated students into emigrating...... but those countries they migrate to aren't really all that, just more organised.
so you get brain drain in one country, pro-skilled immigrant policies in another country and then eventually immigration restriction policies when too many people want to go.
what do you think should be done?
@@Ashystar067 have more babies.
@@jeetlahkar894 There are massive social issues preventing this.
I don't know much about economics or politics but Australia is a safer place than America however inflation and cost of living is getting too high. I haven't been impacted by it too much but when I go to the grocery store I end up spending $50 when it would had cost me like $20 back then, then something is up and it needs to be fixed.
Many times I discuss prices with my American friends and $200 USD is about $330 AUD and I find that outrageous. Or like Americans complaining tht a brand new Triple A game costs $70-$80 USD but for Australia it'll set you back $100-$110. Ridiculous.
High wages mean Australia will never be globally competitive in high volume manufacturing. Australia does have a number of low volume / high complexity exporters in the defence and medical industries. In terms of farming, it’s only the highly industrialised low wage input farming where Australia is successful, wheat, barley, sugar, live cattle, sheep, etc. Farming with high labour input such as fruit is only for domestic consumption.
Totally agree it's a dumb country..
Who else would do everything to jeopardize their economic future by constantly being provocative towards their biggest trading partner and with big surplus in their favour by the way
I live in Australia and the advertisement after the video was from a real estate agency.
houses and rocks 🪨 😂
Correct in that a high percentage of exports relates to natural resources. Incorrect in that not many Australians are employed in that space. Matters, domestically, are a lot more diverse than that. A lot of high value-added jobs. Unfortunately, a bit too much of "affluence" relates to real estate (a Ponzi scheme) and not enough to manufacturing.