Search Results | Showing 1 - 10 of 112 results for %22Government Employees Superannuation Board%22 |
| | ... financial impacts of climate change from 1 July 2026, according to mandatory climate risk reporting legislation proposed by government. Treasury released the exposure draft of legislation that would make financial disclosure of climate risk and opportunity ... |
| | | ... However, the ATO reported there is an estimated $3.6 billion in unpaid super between 2020 and 2021. In response, the government will require super be paid on payday, effective 1 July 2026. Industry Super Australia (ISA) has predicted that the amendment ... |
| | | ... roles. According to the Workplace Gender Equality Agency's (WGEA) latest scorecard, which assessed 4.82 million employees, the remuneration gender gap trended down 1.1% year on year, the largest drop since it collated data in 2014. On pay checks ... |
| | | ... roles such as Australian Council of Trade Unions senior industrial officer and Australian Government Employees Superannuation Trust (AGEST) chief executive. Most recently, she was chief executive of Industry Fund Services. Bowtell also currently serves ... |
| | | ... and international banks, as well as former and current employees. Yieldbroker is a trading platform for Australian government bonds and interest rate derivatives, while Tradeweb operates marketplaces for rates, credit, equities, and money markets. "We ... |
| | | ... includes paid menstrual leave. Forming a working group with several trade unions, the law firm is pushing for the federal government to recognise the various impacts menopause can have on a woman day-to-day, particularly her ability to work. Jessica ... |
| | | Rest chair Ken Marshman will step down at the end of the year, to be replaced by a former Victorian government minister. Marshman has been on the Rest board since December 2017 when he joined as an independent director. In July 2014, he became independent ... |
| | | Grattan Institute has warned the government against watering down the Your Future, Your Super reforms, saying it should instead focus on implementing the remaining recommendations of the Productivity Commission. In its submission, Grattan Institute ... |
| | | ... police the lowest common denominator out of the industry. "So that cost is possibly not going away. But with a change of government, there might be some softening to what is sensible." Like the leadership of CareSuper, First Super and legalsuper, Taylor ... |
| | | ... profit-to-member funds of a similar size and shared a common history; a history of servicing current and former local government employees in their respective states of NSW and Victoria. Should the merger proceed, the funds will jointly manage approximately ... |
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