Pitch Engine
Times Advertising


.

Super funds should use their substantial holdings for public good

  • Written by Kate Shaw, Honorary Senior Fellow in Urban Geography and Planning, The University of Melbourne
Super funds should use their substantial holdings for public goodShutterstock

Last month Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers unveiled the National Housing Accord, intended to build a million new homes in Australia. Part of the plan is to encourage superannuation funds to invest in social and affordable housing.

The proposal was met with criticism from some quarters, with critics arguing Australia’s...

Read more: Super funds should use their substantial holdings for public good

More Articles ...

  1. To start cutting gas and electricity prices, here's what the government looks likely to deliver by Christmas
  2. Chokepoint Capitalism: why we'll all lose unless we stop Amazon, Spotify and other platforms squeezing cash from creators
  3. A mandate for multi-employer bargaining? Without it, wages for the low paid won't rise
  4. Why giving the Commerce Commission the power to set 'fair' fuel prices is unfair on NZ’s climate targets
  5. 'A kind of meditative peace': quiet hour shopping makes us wonder why our cities have to be so noisy
  6. Mark Zuckerberg can sack 11,000 workers but shareholders can't dump him: it's called 'management entrenchment'
  7. Morning or evening type? Choice of hours is the next big thing in workplace flexibility
  8. For richer, for poorer: how married CEOs are less prone to risky investing and insider trading
  9. We're putting gender at the heart of the Fair Work Act, but there's still no compassionate leave for abortions
  10. Negative equity is looming for some home owners – but you only need to worry if you need to sell
  11. In defence of RBA Governor Philip Lowe: an easy scapegoat for record interest rate rises
  12. Just 25% of business are insured against cyber attacks. Here's why
  13. Leading economists back federal government action to curb rising gas and electricity prices
  14. Fighting inflation doesn’t directly cause unemployment – but that's still the most likely outcome
  15. Australia's borders are open, so where are all the backpackers?
  16. Why has the RBA raised interest rates for a record 7th straight month? High inflation – and worse is on the way
  17. Employers say Labor's new industrial relations bill threatens the economy. Denmark tells a different story
  18. Pubs and clubs – your friendly neighbourhood money-laundering service, thanks to 86,640 pokies
  19. Cheaper gas and electricity prices are within Australia's grasp – here's what to do
  20. Budget restraint? When it comes to transport projects, it's hard to find
  21. Jim Chalmers’ 2022-23 budget mantra: whatever you do, don’t fuel inflation
  22. Financial adviser 'reforms' will undermine yet another royal commission recommendation
  23. Labor's love lost: the tide is turning on private ownership of electricity grids
  24. Imagine if each of us could direct where our taxes were spent. Meet TaxTrack
  25. Floods, pandemics, wars and market forces: what's driving up the price of milk
  26. Global recession looks likely. Even if Australia escapes it, we are in for a bad couple of years
  27. After the Optus data breach, Australia needs mandatory disclosure laws
  28. Star Sydney suspension: how do casino operators found so unfit get to keep their licences?
  29. Australia needs an honest conversation about tax and budgets – and Jim Chalmers is ready to talk
  30. In sticking with tax cuts divorced from reality, Labor is left with a hard choice
  31. Australian women are more educated than men, but gender divides remain at work
  32. Mind the gap: gender differences in time use appear to be narrowing, but slowly
  33. Not all beer and pokies: what Australians did with their super when COVID struck
  34. Measuring the 'Halloween effect' – can retail investor optimism really affect stock returns?
  35. The end of coal-fired power is in sight, even with private interests holding out
  36. Optus data breach: regulatory changes announced, but legislative reform still needed
  37. New economic index reveals the toll policy uncertainty can have on your investments
  38. A class action against Optus could easily be Australia's biggest: here's what is involved
  39. NZ biggest firms will soon have to disclose their climate risk – but will it really curb climate change?
  40. A sham sentence after a secret trial for Aung San Suu Kyi's Australian economic adviser
  41. Optus says it needed to keep identity data for six years. But did it really?
  42. What now for petrol prices? Global doom and gloom makes the outlook surprisingly positive
  43. A global recession looks increasingly likely – but here's how Australia could escape it
  44. Why the Reserve Bank's record loss of $37 nbsp;billion was actually good for Australia
  45. Small communities could be buying, selling and saving money on electric power right now – here’s how
  46. Memo to the Productivity Commission: fixing inequality is the key to productivity
  47. 'We haven't built it, and they've come': the e-change pressures on Australia's lifestyle towns
  48. 3 ways 'bossware' surveillance technology is turning back the management clock
  49. Despite high hopes, multi-employer bargaining is unlikely to 'get wages moving'
  50. Survey reveals two-thirds of NZ employees want more work-life flexibility – how should employers respond?