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Are superannuation funds turning their back on the environment?
Are superannuation funds turning their back on the environment?
The Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility (ACCR) has lashed out at the country’s largest superannuation funds for failing to step up on climate action.
The latest ACCR report compared the publicly available proxy voting records of 50 of the largest superannuation funds, looking at 135 climate change related shareholder proposals.
Read more at Nestegg.
Budget highlights at a glance
Major Spending Initiatives
- $36 billion in new spending
- $17 billion in personal tax cuts
- $8.5 billion in universal Medicare spending
- $5 billion for childcare
- 20% of student debt wiped for 3 million students
- $150 off power bills for all households and small businesses
- Prescription costs capped at $25 each
Economic Forecasts
- Growth: 1.5% in 2024-25, rising to 2.25% in 2025-26
- Inflation: Expected to return to 2-3% band by June 2025
- Wage growth: Outpacing cost of living rises by 0.5% this year
Business Measures
- Non-compete clauses removed for workers earning under $175,000
- $20 million “Buy Australian” advertising campaign
- Incentives for construction and building worker apprentices doubled from $5,000 to $10,000
- Uncertainty around the instant asset write-off scheme
- Foreign investors restricted from buying new homes
Budget Position
- Deficit: $27.6 billion in 2024-25, rising to $42.1 billion in 2025-26
- Government spending as a percentage of GDP rising to 27%