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Have You Noticed? Australia

Everything happened around you that you might not noticed about

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  1. 21

    Series: Universities For Sale — Part 4: What Is A University For?

    # Series: Universities For Sale — Part 4: What Is A University For? In the final part of *Universities For Sale*, Alex Mercer brings the series together and asks the bigger question: what is a university actually for in modern Australia? This episode looks at housing pressure, migration politics, foreign influence concerns, and research dependence — then follows those threads back to the core problem. When public universities are pushed to behave like revenue engines, what happens to their role as public institutions? If you missed the earlier parts, start at Part 1 and follow the series through.

  2. 20

    Series: Universities For Sale — Part 3: The Student As Cashflow

    In Part 3 of our series Universities For Sale, Alex Mercer examines what happens when students stop being treated mainly as learners and start being treated as revenue. This episode looks at recruitment agents, entry standards, support gaps, casualised teaching, overcrowded campuses, and the deeper cost of building a university system around cashflow rather than education. Series: Universities For Sale Part 3: The Student As Cashflow

  3. 19

    Series: Universities For Sale — Part 2: The Funding Hole Canberra Created

    In Part 2 of our series Universities For Sale, Alex Mercer traces the funding choices that pushed Australian universities toward dependence on international student fees. This episode examines the shrinking public funding settlement, the cross-subsidy of research, the rise of managerial culture, and why Canberra found off-budget university revenue politically easier than honest structural reform. Series: Universities For Sale Part 2: The Funding Hole Canberra Created

  4. 18

    Series: Universities For Sale — Part 1: The Export Industry With Lecture Theatres

    In Part 1 of our series Universities For Sale, Alex Mercer traces how international education became one of Australia's biggest exports and how universities grew financially dependent on overseas student demand. This episode examines the shift from public institution to export business, the incentives that came with that change, and why the model left campuses more commercial, more fragile, and deeply entangled with migration, housing, and public funding debates. Series: Universities For Sale Part 1: The Export Industry With Lecture Theatres

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    The Jobless Number That Turns Rate Hikes Into A Household Gamble

    Australia's unemployment rate has jumped to 4.5 per cent, and that changes the whole argument about another Reserve Bank rate hike. Alex Mercer looks at why the jobs number matters for mortgage holders, renters, small businesses, and anyone being told to accept pain as policy. Sources: Australian Bureau of Statistics Labour Force April 2026; Reserve Bank of Australia cash rate target table; The Guardian reporting on unemployment and market expectations.

  6. 16

    Series: The Great Barrier Reef Cover-Up — Part 6: Coal or Coral

    Part 6 of The Great Barrier Reef Cover-Up asks the final question: can Australia claim to protect the Reef while continuing to approve and export the fuels driving ocean warming? This finale connects the series' earlier threads — funding, lobbying, science, bleaching, and UNESCO diplomacy — to the deeper contradiction in Australian climate policy: reef protection on one side, fossil fuel expansion on the other.

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    The Missing Million That Explains The Housing Squeeze

    A sharp look at the reported “missing million” population claim, and why even disputed population estimates matter for housing, infrastructure, schools, hospitals, and daily life in Australia. The take: whether the one-million undercount claim proves right or not, Australia’s official numbers already show a country growing faster than its planning system admits. If we miscount the people, we underbuild their future.

  8. 14

    The Car Parks Nobody Uses, But Everyone Pays For

    The ABC reported on a new Grattan Institute report finding Australia spends more than one billion dollars each year building off-street apartment parking that often sits empty. This episode argues that parking minimums are a hidden housing tax: a rule that quietly makes apartments more expensive, blocks supply, and forces people to pay for car spaces they may never use. Sources: - ABC News: Grattan Institute report calls for abolition of parking minimum requirements across Australia - Grattan Institute: Wasted space: Axe car-parking rules to cut the cost of housing - The Guardian Australia: Scrapping 86,000 new car parking spaces could save $5.2bn and drive down rents, Grattan report finds

  9. 13

    The Beach Fee That Turns Public Sand Into A Toll Gate

    Randwick Council is considering paid beach parking for non-residents at seven eastern Sydney beaches. Alex Mercer argues the real issue is bigger than parking: if every shared public cost gets solved by another fee, Australia risks turning the commons into a checkout screen. Sources: news.com.au reporting on Randwick City Council's beach parking proposal and consultation results.

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    Series: The Great Barrier Reef Cover-Up — Part 5: The UNESCO Escape Act

    # Series: The Great Barrier Reef Cover-Up — Part 5: The UNESCO Escape Act *Episode type: series* *Target: up to 15 minutes spoken audio* *Tone: investigative Australian narrative — measured, serious, story-driven, direct but less casual than daily episodes* *Script Readability Gate before performance pass: use these constraints while drafting, then print PASS/FAIL and rewrite until passing — spoken-first investigative writing, one clear through-line, up to 15 minutes spoken audio, most sentences 20 words or fewer, no sentence over 25 words except fixed opener/approved quotes/justified emphasis, short 1-3 sentence paragraphs, simple spoken beats, natural source mentions, no URLs/meta labels in the spoken body, continuity without over-recapping, and a smooth landing planned from the start.* *Performance pass before TTS: shape cadence, gravity, and pauses; use sparse MiniMax pause tags for investigative beats, section turns, and the outro landing. After the performance pass, complete the mandatory Performance & Pause Gate with PASS/FAIL results before MiniMax dry-run or real TTS.* G'day and welcome back to Have You Noticed Australia. Today, we're continuing our series on The Great Barrier Reef Cover-Up. If you missed the earlier episodes, I'd recommend starting there — because what we're about to cover builds on what we found last time. In this part, we'll expose the high-stakes diplomatic game Australia played with UNESCO. The goal was simple: repeatedly dodging an 'in-danger' listing for the Reef. This happened despite mounting evidence of its rapid decline.<#0.6#> We've already seen the financial shell game with the $443 million blank cheque. We uncovered the behind-the-scenes Paris lobbying. And we showed how scientific reporting was manipulated. Now, the international community, through UNESCO, was paying very close attention.<#0.8#> The Reef is a World Heritage site. Its protection is a global responsibility. UNESCO is the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. They oversee sites of outstanding universal value. The Great Barrier Reef, a natural wonder, falls squarely into this category. Its ecological health is monitored rigorously. Australia, as its custodian, has obligations.<#0.8#> Early reports from UNESCO and the International Union for Conservation of Nature, or IUCN, flagged serious concerns. They pointed to water quality, climate change impacts, and coastal development. These warnings were clear and direct. They called for urgent action.<#0.8#> But Australia's response was a masterclass in diplomatic maneuvering. We saw strategic assurances and carefully crafted action plans. These were submitted to buy time. The government pushed back against the 'in-danger' label. It argued that significant efforts were underway.<#0.8#> This led to a predictable cycle: the 'six-month warning'. UNESCO would issue a stern warning. Australia would promise new initiatives. It would make carefully timed announcements. Then, narrowly, the 'in-danger' listing would be avoided. Only for the same issues to resurface six months later. It was a pattern of delay, not genuine progress.<#0.8#> The political stakes were incredibly high. Avoiding an 'in-danger' listing was crucial for Australia's international reputation. It was about image. It also protected economic interests. Think tourism, fishing, and resource extraction. A downgrading would have been a global embarrassment. It would have impacted our brand.<#1.0#> Consider the 2015 decision. UNESCO deferred placing the Reef on the 'in-danger' list. This followed intense lobbying from Australia. The government pledged a 10-year 'Reef 2050 Long-Term Sustainability Plan'. It was a big promise. But critics called it insufficient. They said it lacked binding targets.<#1.0#> Then came the escalating bleaching events. We talked about these in Part 4. They provided stark, visual evidence of the Reef's distress. Yet, even with these undeniable signs, the diplomatic efforts continued. Australia framed progress reports positively. It downplayed the severity. It emphasised local management actions. The core argument here is unsettling. Despite overwhelming evidence of degradation, despite repeated warnings from international bodies, Australia's diplomatic pressure worked. Strategic concessions and careful PR were enough. They delayed a more damning assessment. This allowed the cover-up to continue on the global stage.<#1.0#> What this pattern shows us is a nation willing to prioritize its international image and economic short-term gains. This came at the expense of the stark reality facing one of its greatest natural wonders.<#1.2#> In the final part of our series, we'll examine the ultimate choice: whether Australia will continue to feed the very causes of the Reef's decline or truly step up to protect it. I'm Alex Mercer — thanks for listening to Have You Noticed Australia.

  11. 11

    The Rebate Cut That Confuses Age With Wealth

    A sharp daily take on Labor's plan to reduce private health insurance rebates for over-65s — and why real fairness should target wealth, not age. Sources used for script research: - ABC News: Older Australians concerned about Labor's plan to reduce private health insurance rebates - ABC News: Private health insurance premiums rise by an average four point four one per cent Draft only — not for publication until approved.

  12. 10

    Series: The Great Barrier Reef Cover-Up — Part 4: The Bleaching They Didn't Report

    Part 4 of The Great Barrier Reef Cover-Up examines how repeated bleaching events were publicly framed: not necessarily hidden outright, but softened through language about resilience, recovery, tourism, and management. The argument is that the cover-up sits in the gap between scientific reality and public messaging — a gap that allowed Australia to treat escalating coral damage as a communications problem instead of a political reckoning. Draft only. Not published.

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    Series: The Great Barrier Reef Cover-Up — Part 2: Australia’s Secret Paris Lobby

    Australia's diplomatic campaign to block a World Heritage 'in danger' listing — the Paris lobby, the deferred votes, and the people behind the pressure.

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    Series: The Great Barrier Reef Cover-Up - Part 1: The $443 Million Blank Cheque

    The Australian government promised to protect the Great Barrier Reef. Instead it handed four hundred and forty-three million dollars to a six-person charity with no tender process no scientific criteria and no mention of climate change. This is the first episode of a six-part series on how Australia destroyed one of the world greatest natural wonders.

  18. 4

    The EV Tax That Penalises Doing the Right Thing

    The federal budget introduced a 2.5 cents per kilometre road user charge on electric vehicles from July 2026. The EV industry and motorists are calling it a tax on climate action - and they are right.

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    Australia's Gas Hostage Crisis Finally Gets a Fix — But Is It Too Little, Too Late?

    The government's new east coast gas reservation policy is the right move — but it's a decade late, won't deliver relief for 14 months, and the government still refuses to properly tax the gas giants who created this mess in the first place.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Everything happened around you that you might not noticed about

HOSTED BY

Alex Mercer

CATEGORIES

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Have You Noticed? Australia have?

Have You Noticed? Australia currently has 21 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

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Everything happened around you that you might not noticed about

How often does Have You Noticed? Australia release new episodes?

Have You Noticed? Australia has 21 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

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Who hosts Have You Noticed? Australia?

Have You Noticed? Australia is created and hosted by Alex Mercer.
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