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Simon Knight

FactCheck: what are the facts on jobs and growth in Australia? - 0 views

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    Christopher Pyne has overstated how well Australia is performing on jobs and growth compared to other major economies. IMF estimates for 2016 on GDP growth had put Australia ahead of the G7 countries. But the latest available data - which are actual figures as of the third quarter of 2016, not estimates - show that Australia's cumulative growth in 2016 so far is at the level of the G7 and not higher. So Australia is performing in line with the G7 and slightly worse than the OECD average.
Simon Knight

Coronavirus data shows which countries have it under control. What did they do right? - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) - 0 views

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    By pulling this chart apart and then helping you put it back together, this story aims to help you understand: how quickly coronavirus is spreading in different countries; where Australia fits into the global picture; what we can learn from countries that appear to have curbed the rise of COVID-19; and what you can do to help keep Australians safe. But first, one concept that's vitally important to understanding a pandemic is exponential growth. This is a pattern viruses tend to initially follow, due to the way they're spread. The result is that what might seem like a small difference in the rate of growth can actually have enormous impacts on how many people are infected overall.
Simon Knight

Why we're moving beyond GDP as a measure of human progress | UTS News Room - 0 views

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    How we track our economy influences everything from government spending and taxes to home lending and business investment. The Conversation series The Way We Measure takes a close look at economic indicators to better understand what's going on. Ever since 1944, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has been a primary measure of economic growth. It's in the news regularly and, even though few can define what it means, there is general acceptance that when GDP is growing, things are good. There are problems with this simplistic formulation.
Simon Knight

Private health insurance premium increases explained in 14 charts - 0 views

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    For the 11 million Australians with private hospital cover, premium rises are nothing new. The 3.95% average increase on April 1, 2018 will be the seventeenth consecutive year in which insurance premiums have been hiked up. Health insurance premiums have increased by an average of 5.35% per year since 2000, which is significantly more than wage growth, meaning that households are spending a larger share of their income on health care.
Simon Knight

Data can help to end malnutrition across Africa - 0 views

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    "Between 2000 and 2015, nearly every African country improved childhood nutrition, especially in reducing stunted growth caused by malnutrition" .... " national averages do not tell the full story. In Kenya, for example, rates of wasting in children under 5 were below 6% on average nationwide in 2015, yet in certain regions plagued by several years of poor rains, crop failure and disease outbreaks, estimated levels of wasting reach as high as 28%."... "Such fine-grained insight brings tremendous responsibility to act. It shows governments, international agencies and donors exactly where to direct resources and support."..."This shows how crucial it is to invest in data. Data gaps undermine our ability to target resources, develop policies and track accountability. Without good data, we're flying blind. If you can't see it, you can't solve it."
Simon Knight

Shark attacks: Research and resources - Journalist's Resource - 1 views

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    While shark attacks are very rare, reports of shark attacks are on the rise. They have more than tripled in recent decades - from a total of 157 reports worldwide between 1970 and 1979 to a combined 661 reports from 2000 to 2009, according to the Florida Program for Shark Research (FPSR), which maintains a database of known attacks dating back to the mid-1500s. It's important to note that the increase is partly the result of an improved reporting system. But research also indicates that human population growth, increased interest in aquatic recreational activities and changes in weather and water quality play a role.
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