One in six started a new job in the last year (to February): ABS
According to figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) today about one in six workers started work with a new employer/business during the year to February 2010.
According to figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) today about one in six workers started work with a new employer/business during the year to February 2010.
This week we released the latest results of the MYOB Business Monitor*, and its positive news. For the first time since the Global Financial Crisis, more business owners in Australia report revenue increases (35%) than report revenue decreases over the last 12 months (22%). And in the next quarter, half of Aussie businesses have got more work on than usual, and only 14% have less.
Centro Retail Trust’s performance this year has dragged down the performance of the broader Centro Property Group with the retail sector performance stagnating in both Australia and the United States over the last year.
Labor’s fiscal stimulus policy at the height of the global financial crisis will net the Federal Government an additional $16 billion in tax receipts from those who would have otherwise been unemployed.
In new figures released by the National Credit Insurance Brokers (NCI) claims received by bad debts in June 2010 were 44 percent higher than the 2004 – 2009 average over the same period.
The Federal Government’s Building the Education Revolution Projects may have run over time and budget, but now can meet apprentice labour requirements with the Ten Percent Compliance Wizard.
Australian employees have lost their passion for the job as well as their belief in themselves and their leaders, a new survey has found
More than half of Australian executives are being negatively impacted by late payments even though payment behaviours improved slightly during the June quarter.
Members of superannuation funds can breath a sigh of relief, with financial year returns back in the black for the first time in three years.
National job vacancies have fallen by 3.1 per cent during the month of June, as employers are waiting until after the federal election to recruit.