A new round of Trans-Pacific Partnership talks have begun in Singapore, where trade ministers from twelve nations carve out the final parts of the far-reaching deal.

Qantas is being hounded by rumours that it will announce massive job cuts this week, but the airline says it will keep cuts down to a thousand workers at most.

The chair of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority says he wants banks to stop bullying it for its stance on capital rule adjustments.

New figures show a 7 per cent rise in National Australia Bank’s underlying profit for the first quarter.

The WA Local Government Association says it will be looking for the reinstatement of grants for regional infrastructure projects.

One of the world’s largest engineering firms has secured a contract to re-design the water infrastructure of an entire country.

The seemingly imminent repeal of the carbon tax is being prevented while Labor and the Greens hold the balance of power in the federal Senate, and new research has investigated how the efforts to end the carbon price may be hurting energy investments.

Corruption investigations have led to the director of the NSW government-owned State Water Corporation stepping down.

A series of currency transactions in 1989 have led to an $882 million government payout to media giant News Corp.

The Federal Government is moving its review of the Renewable Energy Target into full-swing, releasing the terms of reference and announcing who will lead the inquiry.

More than a thousand workers have been sacked after the collapse of engineering company Forge Group, some small towns are worried for their workforce, but reports say the company has been spending-up on executive perks.

UGL, a giant of the Australian trades and construction sector, is expected to announce the sale of its property arm this week.

Clive Palmer’s company has been accused of dipping into a joint fund for about $4.5 million without the permission of his partnering Chinese firm Citic Pacific.

West Australian farmers are taking legal action against ANZ, accusing the bank of ‘predatory’ and ‘unethical’ practices.

A former Australian Prime Minister will lead a program aimed at educating the world's poorest children.

Rio Tinto’s cost-cutting measures will continue, but a surge in earnings has been proof they are effective.

The latest unemployment stats have already been used as evidence for a number of political stands, including calls for new budgetary considerations and industrial relations reform.

Some Queensland doctors may have to front the Crime and Misconduct Commission over allegations of fraud.

Federal Treasurer Joe Hockey has let a Wall Street Journal reporter in on the scale of cuts, sales and savings the Government intends to make, which may soon see the nation's power poles in foreign hands.

Tasmania’s economic situation has darkened in the last year, with the latest reports saying it is leaking money at an increasing rate.

Staff members in sections of federal departments have been offered voluntary redundancies, which some say shows the ineffectiveness of ‘natural attrition’.

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