Alan Kohler is one of Australia’s most experienced commentators and journalists. Alan is the founder of Eureka Report, Australia’s most successful investment newsletter, and Business Spectator, a 24-hour free business news and commentary website. He also hosts Inside Business, a half-hour Sunday programme on the ABC, is the finance presenter on the ABC News - and producer of the nightly graph (or two).

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Martin Parkinson has provided some insight into how Treasury muffed its forecasts and cornered the treasurer, citing dollar behaviour, Asian growth mix-ups and miner optimism.

Lack of federal budget transparency has allowed profligacy on both sides of politics, and while the Coalition has a plan for reform its hopes for a revenue jump are shaky.

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Comments on this article
Comments PolicySometimes the best games of football are the ones where the umpires leave the whistle alone (Rates pragmatism hits the sweet spot, October 3).
We'd be better served if the RBA intervened less on the cash rate...rather than more.
325 points up...then a similiar amount down...would suggest they over react ( and give the banks a free kick in the process).
Pity they aren't as active in the foreign exchange role.
Bruce Meaney. I entirely disagree (October 3, 9.51am). The RBA has discovered that it shouldn't try to be preemptive but in the latest round of rate movements they were simply responding to available data promptly (Rates pragmatism hits the sweet spot, October 3). That's exactly what you should do unless you want to see a day come when inflation or unemployment spiral out of control. We saw an inflation problem start to develop in 2006/2007 which meant they had to stamp their foot on the break resulting in 10 per cent interest rates. Small, timely adjustments are best. As to banks taking a slice, that should fixed by govt regulation, not mucking about with monetary policy.
The Australian economy is in a lot of trouble and the government has taken on too much debt and wasted this money. There is nothing perfect about the economy in 2013 and the RBA will be reducing rates throughout 2013 because of the economic mismanagement in the last few years (Rates pragmatism hits the sweet spot, October 3).
Sorry Steve - mate you are a dreamer! (Rates pragmatism hits the sweet spot, October 3.)
The only surprise to me has been how damn slow RBA has been to drop rates – when I go to the post office and I see wives selling their family mobiles (via EBAY) or I meet mates on mining sites worried about their jobs ( new way to sack workers is drug testing on remote sites is generally pretty slack and done a week or so afterwards so they are all clear - now they are doing it on sites where they want to drop staff - as they get off the plane!). Whilst these are just individual instances, as my main businesses are recruitment - the indications is another drop is on the way - sorry but I have been right every time since 1984 when I got into the business. So where will business get the money to expand ? Not the damn banks as I have clients needing money now - and getting bled or raped by the big 4. And I mean raped! Bankers changing their valuations at the last minute - or refusing to part with agreed funds unless they get more of the project are just some of the legalised ways they are screwing some people and companies. Me - I wont go near a bank – I am buying up in USA!