This speech was given by the Chairman of the Productivity Commission to the Australian Competition Policy Summit 2015\u27 Introduction In 2013, the Australian Government announced that there would be the first comprehensive review of competition policy in Australia in a generation. A policy field more actively used in Australia than in perhaps any other developed nation to improve the structure of the national economy was about to be reinvigorated. So said the press release, issued by the then Minister Bruce Billson in conjunction with the then Prime Minister, Tony Abbott. It said: The Government will undertake a comprehensive review of competition laws and policy, the first in more than 20 years. The \u27root and branch\u27 review d...
In the decade and a half since the Productivity Commission was formally established, it has complete...
In this \u27Colin Clark Memorial Lecture\u27 at the University of Queensland in August 2008, Gary Ba...
If Australia is to prosper as a nation, and maintain and improve living standards and opportunities ...
The Government has released its response to the Competition Policy Review (\u27the Harper ...
Both the world and Australian economies have changed significantly since the Hilmer Review of the 19...
This 1993 report, widely known as the \u27Hilmer report\u27, prompted Australia\u27s landmark microe...
The talk was the first HC Coombs Policy Forum lecture and was presented by the Australian National I...
In December 2013 the recently elected Australian Government commissioned a review into Australia...
On 4 December 2013, the Prime Minister and the Minister for Small Business announced a “root and bra...
Introduction Professor Ian Harper released the final Report of the Competition Policy Review (‘the ...
The Australian economy has experienced two major waves of reform in recent years. The first was char...
Australia’s record long stretch of uninterrupted economic growth has not been by chance but by desig...
• Australia’s productivity growth surged to a record high in the 1990s – more than double the rate a...
In 2004 the Australian Government asked the Productivity Commission to look at the impact on the eco...
On 15 October 2001, the Prime Minister announced that there would be an independent review of the co...
In the decade and a half since the Productivity Commission was formally established, it has complete...
In this \u27Colin Clark Memorial Lecture\u27 at the University of Queensland in August 2008, Gary Ba...
If Australia is to prosper as a nation, and maintain and improve living standards and opportunities ...
The Government has released its response to the Competition Policy Review (\u27the Harper ...
Both the world and Australian economies have changed significantly since the Hilmer Review of the 19...
This 1993 report, widely known as the \u27Hilmer report\u27, prompted Australia\u27s landmark microe...
The talk was the first HC Coombs Policy Forum lecture and was presented by the Australian National I...
In December 2013 the recently elected Australian Government commissioned a review into Australia...
On 4 December 2013, the Prime Minister and the Minister for Small Business announced a “root and bra...
Introduction Professor Ian Harper released the final Report of the Competition Policy Review (‘the ...
The Australian economy has experienced two major waves of reform in recent years. The first was char...
Australia’s record long stretch of uninterrupted economic growth has not been by chance but by desig...
• Australia’s productivity growth surged to a record high in the 1990s – more than double the rate a...
In 2004 the Australian Government asked the Productivity Commission to look at the impact on the eco...
On 15 October 2001, the Prime Minister announced that there would be an independent review of the co...
In the decade and a half since the Productivity Commission was formally established, it has complete...
In this \u27Colin Clark Memorial Lecture\u27 at the University of Queensland in August 2008, Gary Ba...
If Australia is to prosper as a nation, and maintain and improve living standards and opportunities ...