Jake Hall-Evans

1.8K posts

Jake Hall-Evans

Jake Hall-Evans

@hallevansjake

Proud to live in the Western Suburbs, proud father and husband. Views are my own.

Adelaide, South Australia Beigetreten Ekim 2016
294 Folgt265 Follower
Jake Hall-Evans
Jake Hall-Evans@hallevansjake·
@MickAtko @MLCGame I'll focus on the issues facing the electorate as people get annoyed about the politics of politics. Take care @MickAtko and happy campaigning! I hope it's clean and positive 👍
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Michael Atkinson
Michael Atkinson@MickAtko·
@hallevansjake @MLCGame But you were the candidate of a registered political party just last week & had been spruiking for it for months. Why have you deleted those videos & posts ? And why won’t you tell us in what Adelaide suburb you live & why you aren’t standing for your home electorate ?
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Jake Hall-Evans
Jake Hall-Evans@hallevansjake·
@MickAtko @MLCGame Went to Grange School, first job at Macca's Fulham, family living in Fulham, West Beach and Lockleys, in the electorate constantly. Independent because I will always put people before a party and parties struggle with that. Look forward to seeing how the other independent go👍
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Michael Atkinson
Michael Atkinson@MickAtko·
@hallevansjake @MLCGame So, where do you live and why Colton & not the State District where you live ? And why are you no longer a Fair Go party candidate ?
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Jake Hall-Evans
Jake Hall-Evans@hallevansjake·
This was always going to be a transition risk between generations. How could policy markets not realise and provision for this?
Kos Samaras@KosSamaras

When ‘Boomer’ means broke: The other side of retirement A decent chunk of older Australians are not “asset rich and doing fine”. In fact, a big slice of baby boomers sit among the poorest people in the country, living on the Age Pension with no superannuation to fall back on. When you dig into the data, you find something like a quarter of the entire boomer cohort are likely both on the pension and without super. It’s even worse for older boomers and women, who carried the brunt of unpaid care and broken work histories long before compulsory super kicked in properly. So we need to be a lot more nuanced when we talk about “older Australians”: Yes, there’s a group of well-off retirees with paid-off homes, investments and healthy super balances. But there is also a large group of older Australians, especially women, renters, and those in lower-income suburbs, who are almost entirely reliant on the pension in a brutal cost-of-living environment. Public debate keeps defaulting to the cashed-up boomer stereotype. Policymaking can’t afford to. If you design tax, housing, health and welfare policy on the assumption that all boomers are financially comfortable, you will miss a very vulnerable part of the country and they’re not a small. And here is an added sting. Their aged care needs will need to be met by their kids, who themselves are middle age and also possibly struggling.

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Aaron Smith
Aaron Smith@aaronsmith·
OMFG. This video is apparently from the NSW Northern Province Liberals convention. I refuse to believe grown adults made this on purpose. Just when I thought the Libs had hit rock bottom.
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David Pocock
David Pocock@DavidPocock·
The CSIRO, the agency that gave the world Wi-Fi, among other world-leading research, has never been more important to Australia’s future. Successive governments have failed to invest. We need to turn that around and value the science and scientists that are key to our future. theguardian.com/australia-news…
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Quentin Dempster
Quentin Dempster@QuentinDempster·
@AlboMP⁩’s personal attack on ⁦former senator @MrRexPatrick⁩ who dared to expose Commonwealth FOI as a joke is distressing/revealing. Transparency should be at the heart of orderly democratic government = public trust. Seems our PM is suffering first signs of hubris.
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Dudes Posting Their W’s
Dudes Posting Their W’s@DudespostingWs·
This guy explains why everything we know about addiction is actually wrong
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Chris Richardson
Chris Richardson@ChrisEconomist·
DUM, DUM de DUMB ... Sydney's median price across both houses and apartments rose by $10,000 last month. (OK, it was $9,900.) If it maintains that pace, then median housing prices will rise by $120,000 in the coming year. How many young people do you know who will be able to save more than $120,000 - after tax - in the coming year? So if you were to nominate the policy that you'd LEAST want to see coming into operation today, it'd be the one that lets new homebuyers buy on a 5% deposit ... To repeat the obvious, Australia doesn't have a lack of money chasing housing. We have a lack of housing. The policy coming into operation today will make the owners of housing about $60bn wealthier. What it will have the exact opposite of doing is making housing more affordable. I'm writing an article for the weekend on why governments regularly choose 'feel good' policy over actually good policy. Sadly, all governments do it ...
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Chris Richardson
Chris Richardson@ChrisEconomist·
IT’S TIME FOR INDEXATION Yesterday I recommended a minimalist reform to personal tax – doing what we do now, but with fewer moving parts. But we can do better than merely reducing complexity: we can index personal tax thresholds. In brief, there’s a trade-off: switching to indexation reduces flexibility for politicians, but it would improve the trust that our systems increasingly lack. And that’s a trade-off I’d happily make. Our default is faulty. Shortfalls in money collected from the failing parts of our tax system (cigarettes, gas, banks etc) get made up over time by bracket creep – by higher taxes on workers. That means the existing bias in the tax system against workers and the young is on a ‘set and forget’ course to worsen over time. Why should we index? The average personal tax rate rises relative rapidly over time as wage increases push people into higher tax brackets. Governments love that, because it allows them to announce relatively regular tax cuts: · Yet those aren’t really cuts at all – they’re just handing you back what inflation took away. · Even better for the politicians, they get to choose when they hand that money back. Unsurprisingly, their generosity tends to be on show when there’s an election coming. · That’s why politicians love the existing system: they get to pretend to be generous when they’re merely handing money back that inflation stole from families, and they get to time that to maximise their electoral chances. · Even better, at any given moment the lack of indexation means that official forecasts always show the budget balance improving over the long haul. That allows the pollies to point to that and pretend that they’re being responsible. But there’s a growing problem: the punters are increasingly losing faith in the system. And that failing faith risks being increasingly costly over time. So it’s time. I’d be happy to switch to indexing the personal tax thresholds by a set 2.5% a year, and doing the same for some government payments too That idea isn’t mine: it’s been proposed by Luci Ellis of Westpac (ex-RBA). It would: · Help restore trust in the system. · Remove the ability of governments to pretend that they have budget repair under control. · Remove the flexibility of the government of the day to time tax cuts around elections. Are there good reasons not to do it? You’ll hear some people say that “it would cost a fortune”. But that’s only true if governments didn’t regularly hand back the money anyway. So that’s not an apples-with-apples comparison. (Besides, shifting to indexation doesn’t completely stop the average rate of personal tax drifting up. That’s because, over time, wages grow faster than prices.) Yet there is an argument against indexation that I do think has merit: you take away some of the ability of governments to bribe their way to reforming the tax system (as, for example, happened when the GST was introduced). Yet that last argument isn’t enough to change my mind. The big point is that our failing trust in governments of all stripes means we should be actively rebuilding that trust. Indexing the personal tax system would be a good way to start that journey …
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ABC News
ABC News@abcnews·
Homelessness has risen to the "worst levels in living memory" in the first term of the Albanese government, advocacy groups warn, as the government grapples with advice that housing targets will not be met. ab.co/3IDfjha
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Rex Patrick
Rex Patrick@MrRexPatrick·
The concerning side story to this news piece is that taxpayer funded Treasury advice on important economic issues is being withheld from the public. Secrecy isn’t necessary to manage the economy. It’s a cynical tool used to manage the politics. #auspol abc.net.au/news/2025-07-1…
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Jet Ski Bandit
Jet Ski Bandit@fulovitboss·
Game over 🏡 Boomers had it easy and fooked it for everyone. Good one guys.
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Rex Patrick
Rex Patrick@MrRexPatrick·
Electricity prices have risen today. Why? Gas sets the electricity price and the Government has put the gas cartel’s wants ahead of Aussie consumer and business needs. It’s OUR gas. #auspol
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Doug Cameron
Doug Cameron@DougCameron51·
This is embarrassing. Richard Marles making no sense as he avoids serious questions. The public have a right to know and understand the implications of the AUKUS debacle for peace, economic and social stability and our sovereignty. #7.30
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Malcolm Turnbull
Malcolm Turnbull@TurnbullMalcolm·
“If the US Navy is already short of SSNs and its industry is producing too few to replace retirements, let alone increase the fleet numbers, how could any president, no matter how well disposed to Australia, part with any of them even to an ally like Australia?” Turnbull told the FT. “But any plan B will need time to put in place. If Australia waits until 2032 to get the bad news that America cannot spare any Virginias, there will be no time left to do anything except wallow in self-pity,” he said. “Elbridge Colby needs to be at his clear-eyed best and tell the Australians what they need to know, not what they want to hear,” Turnbull added.
Financial Times@FT

US sends a shot across the bows of its allies over submarine deal on.ft.com/4l2r52l

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