Why YOUR pay has fallen this month after compulsory super wa

Why YOUR pay has fallen this month after compulsory super was increased to 10%


Australians are noticing their pay levels have fallen after compulsory employer superannuation contributions were increased to 10 per cent. 
For the first time ever, super is in the double digits, following a rise from 9.5 per cent on July 1.
Superannuation is increasing by half a percentage point at the start of each financial year until it reaches 12 per cent by July 2025.
This month's latest increase has seen 13 per cent of workers report seeing a drop in their take-home pay, a survey of 838 Australians in work by CoreData Research found.
Australians are noticing their pay levels have fallen after compulsory employer superannuation contributions were increased to 10 per cent. This month's latest increase has seen 13 per cent of workers report seeing a drop in their take-home pay, a survey of 838 Australians (pictured is a stock image) in work by CoreData Research found

Related Keywords

Australia , Australians , Andrew Inwood , Brendan Coates , Jane Hume , Julia Gillard , Tony Abbott , Grattan Institute , Association Of Superannuation Funds Australia , Coredata Research , Minister Jane Hume , Superannuation Funds , ஆஸ்திரேலியா , ஆஸ்திரேலியர்கள் , ஆண்ட்ரூ இன்வூட் , பிரெண்டன் பூச்சுகள் , ஜேன் ஹியூம் , ஜூலியா கில்லார்ட் , டோனி அப்போட் , க்ர்யாடெந் நிறுவனம் , சங்கம் ஆஃப் சுப்பெறன்ணுஅதிோன் நிதி ஆஸ்திரேலியா , அமைச்சர் ஜேன் ஹியூம் , சுப்பெறன்ணுஅதிோன் நிதி ,

© 2025 Vimarsana