Why young workers are fleeing Sydney’s wealthy suburbs

Why young workers are fleeing Sydney’s wealthy suburbs

The housing crisis is triggering an exodus in the eastern suburbs,inner west and lower north shore.

  • byMatt Wade

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Starting your first job? It’s time to think about retirement

Starting your first job? It’s time to think about retirement

Australia’s youngest workers are starting to build gold mines – but there’s a strong chance they don’t even realise it.

  • byEmma Koehn
Thought the pandemic made us miserable? Here’s why we’re more miserable now
Opinion
Inflation

Thought the pandemic made us miserable? Here’s why we’re more miserable now

“Australians are living through the most protracted period of economic misery since 2011,” says economic think tank CEDA.

  • byElizabeth Knight
Does your coffee choice dictate how good you are at your job?

Does your coffee choice dictate how good you are at your job?

While there’s no accounting for taste,a penchant for scorching-hot lattes should send alarm bells ringing.

  • byJonathan Rivett
WA’s population is booming,but it’s not thanks to our birth rate

WA’s population is booming,but it’s not thanks to our birth rate

Western Australia’s population has grown by 89,000 people in the past year,according to the latest Australian Bureau of Statistics data.

  • byClaire Ottaviano andSarah Brookes
The one question that can make or break your career

The one question that can make or break your career

It’s a conundrum that all workers will face at some stage and finding the right balance between experts and all-rounders is crucial to a good workplace.

  • byTim Duggan
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Here’s how you stop AI from taking your job

Here’s how you stop AI from taking your job

Career success requires you to be adaptive and not wait for your employer to give you the skills you need to thrive in a changing workplace.

  • byMichelle Gibbings
Australian CEOs keen to pull the plug on working from home

Australian CEOs keen to pull the plug on working from home

White-collar workers will be back in the office five days a week by 2027,more than 80 per cent of chief executives say in a KPMG survey.

  • byColin Kruger
Albanese warns corporate chiefs of ‘extreme anti-business’ opposition

Albanese warns corporate chiefs of ‘extreme anti-business’ opposition

The PM has gone on the offensive in a growing row with big business,saying his government has “stood up for some of Australia’s biggest employers”.

  • byDavid Crowe andOlivia Ireland
WeightWatchers Australia forced to shed staff as Ozempic effect takes toll
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Employment

WeightWatchers Australia forced to shed staff as Ozempic effect takes toll

Oprah Winfrey’s abrupt break with WeightWatchers this year pointed to the company’s struggles amid a new generation of weight-loss drugs. Now its Australian arm is taking a hit.

  • byColin Kruger andJessica Yun
Business chiefs confront PM for taking economy ‘backwards’

Business chiefs confront PM for taking economy ‘backwards’

The government is standing by its centrepiece workplace reforms even as the Business Council of Australia unleashes a fresh assault on its workplace agenda.

  • byDavid Crowe