Pitch Engine
The Times Real Estate

.

Super power: why the future of Australian capitalism is now in Greg Combet's hands

  • Written by Danny Davis, Executive Director, Australian Institute of Performance Sciences, and researcher at, La Trobe University
Super power: why the future of Australian capitalism is now in Greg Combet's handsGreg Combet wants to use his super power to free business from being hostage to short-term share-price and profit measures.Shutterstock

Right now Greg Combet is arguably the most powerful man in Australia.

Earlier this month the former trade unionist and federal politician declared his intention to transform Australian business. His radical idea: to...

Read more: Super power: why the future of Australian capitalism is now in Greg Combet's hands

More Articles ...

  1. Two ways to fund NSW election promises as property prices crash
  2. Introducing shadow equity: a fresh idea to escape the low wage trap
  3. Pandanomics is a grey area, but to us the value of giant pandas is black and white
  4. Ultra low wage growth isn't accidental. It is the intended outcome of government policies
  5. Dowry abuse does exist, but let's focus on the wider issues of economic abuse and coercive control
  6. Dentists need a licence to practice. Why not economists?
  7. Why wait for the Brexit fog to clear? Australian, British and multinational businesses are moving on
  8. India's grand experiment in corporate social responsibility is heading for trouble
  9. On Kangaroo Island and elsewhere, beware the lure of the luxury ecotourist
  10. Backlash and gender fatigue. Why progress on gender equality has slowed
  11. Why women in economics have little to celebrate
  12. Gender equity. The way things are going, we won't reach true parity until the 22nd century
  13. Overworked and underpaid: the revival of strikes in New Zealand
  14. It's not about him: leading lessons from Manchester United's caretaker manager
  15. Vital Signs: Australia's sudden ultra-low economic growth ought not to have come as surprise
  16. Introducing gender lens investing. It's more than pink-washing
  17. What if we've had gender the wrong way around? What if, for workplace parity, we focused on men?
  18. Future budgets are going to have to spend more on welfare, which is fine. It's spending on us
  19. Reality check. Having a woman on your board needn't make it diverse
  20. It's more than a free trade agreement. But what exactly have Australia and Indonesia signed?
  21. Why a proposed capital gains tax could mean tax cuts for most New Zealanders
  22. Word games and virtue signalling as the stock exchange reworks its corporate governance code
  23. The ASX abandons push to require companies to have a social licence to operate. Was it only ever 'politically correct nonsense'?
  24. Should online users be bound by their privacy agreements?
  25. Fairness isn't optional. How to design a tax system that works
  26. What's worse than the US-China trade war? A grand peace bargain
  27. Is it time to ditch the private health insurance rebate? It's a question Labor can't ignore
  28. The workplace challenge facing Australia (spoiler alert – it’s not technology)
  29. New laws can shine light on foreign influence, but agents will remain in the shadows
  30. Now is the time to plan how to fight the next recession
  31. What 1,100 Australians told us about the experience of living with debt they can't repay
  32. Australia’s populist moment has arrived
  33. Our culture of overtime is costing us dearly
  34. Vital Signs: why more expensive milk won't help farmers much
  35. Five insights that could move tourism closer towards sustainability
  36. What are we teaching in business schools? The royal commission's challenge to amoral theory
  37. Honest brokers. Why mortgage broker commissions aren't the problem
  38. Amazon's Dash Buttons, now banned in Germany, might be pushing legal limits in Australia
  39. This time it's Labor and the Greens standing in the way of cheaper super
  40. The decoy effect: how you are influenced to choose without really knowing it
  41. Vital Signs: when watchdogs become pets – or the problem of 'regulatory capture'
  42. How Zip Pay works, and why the extra cost of 'buy now, pay later' is still enticing
  43. One-third of Australians think banks do nothing for the greater public good
  44. It's unanimous: Economists' poll says we can fix the banks. But that doesn't mean we will
  45. Welcome to your first job: expect to be underpaid, bullied, harassed or exploited in some way
  46. Killed in the line of work duties: we need to fix dangerous loopholes in health and safety laws
  47. Understanding Hayne. Why less is more
  48. Words that matter. What’s a franking credit? What’s dividend imputation. And what's “retiree tax”?
  49. Frydenberg is wrong to support Ivanka and Donald Trump on the World Bank. It'd be better to let it die
  50. Vital Signs. If needed, this man can and will cut rates during the election campaign