



Money Week with James Willis π°πποΈ - 13 March 2026
Your weekend catch-up is here. Money Week rounds up the best of the week from the Money News team. Catch the full show at 7pm MondayβThursday on your radio, or hit play on the podcast feed anytime.

Why the RBA will hike rates next week and in May ππ°
All of the Big Four banks are now predicting a rise in the cash rate next week. NAB Chief Economist Sally Auld joins James Willis to discuss why the RBA will inevitably lift the cash rate next week.Β

"Not even one extra day" Bowen's fuel plan under fire β½π₯
The federal government has announced they have lowered the petrol standard for 60 days, Energy Minister Chris Bowen says it will add 100 million litres of fuel a month to domestic supply. Aidan Morrison - Director of Energy, Centre for Independent StudiesΒ says it doesn't even cover one extra day β¦

Money News with James Willis π΅ππ» - Thursday, 12th March
Missed the show? Catch up on Money News with the full show podcast π Host: James Willis ποΈ Executive Producer: Tom Kennedy π Technical Producer: Liam Achurch π

Allegra Spender talks major tax reform πΈπͺ
Federal MP for Wentworth Allegra Spender proposes major tax reform.Β

"Robin Hood" superannuation reform slips through parliament πΉπ°

Money News with James Willis π΅ππ» - Wednesday, 11th March
Missed the show? Catch up on Money News with the full show podcast π Host: James Willis ποΈ Executive Producer: Tom Kennedy π Technical Producer: Liam Achurch π

Let's Talk Business w/ Jeremy Rosen from TaxiBox ππ¦
This week weβre spotlighting another great Aussie business, they took a simple frustration we all deal withβ¦ Moving and storage.Β And turned it into a national success story. TaxiBox started back in 2010 as a two-man operation. They had a small warehouse and an idea... Let's Talk Business is proudβ¦

Money News with James Willis π΅ππ» - Tuesday, 10th March
Missed the show? Catch up on Money News with the full show podcast π Host: James Willis ποΈ Executive Producer: Tom Kennedy π Technical Producer: Liam Achurch π

The "ridiculous" construction code hurting our housing dreams π π·ποΈ
One of the biggest problems facing our housing targets is the National Construction Code.Β What started as a simple rulebook for builders has ballooned from less than 100 pages in the early 1990s to almost 900 pages today.Β Builders say the complexity is killing productivity and driving up costs.