MarketIndustry superannuation fund
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Industry superannuation fund

An industry superannuation fund are Australian superannuation funds that historically were established by Australian trade unions to manage retirement savings for workers in their industry. Funds other than industry funds are referred to as 'retail funds'.

History
Prior to 1992, superannuation was common among workers; often enforceable through contribution requirements within industrial awards. Due to the variation in award agreements, superannuation requirements were inconsistent across industries. The Keating Government changed this by legislating a uniform compulsory ‘Superannuation Guarantee’ system. Part of the reform's purpose was to promote self-funded retirement, reducing the burden on the taxpayer-funded pension scheme. The change came about through a tripartite agreement between the government, employer groups and trade unions. Trade unions agreed to forgo a national 3% pay increase for their members, which would instead be put into the new superannuation system for all employees in Australia. This was matched by employers' contributions which were set to increase over time. Following this, 72% of Australian workers were covered by retirement savings schemes. In practice, over 75% of workers remained with their employer’s default fund, which was usually an industry fund. From this time, industry super funds were also no longer required to be industry-specific, and most became open to membership by a majority of Australian workers. Such open funds are called public offer funds. Since 1 January 2014, all employers must select an approved MySuper account as their default super fund into which they must pay all default super guarantee contributions (minimum employer contributions). However, employees can nominate an alternative investment fund, called a stapled super fund. ME Bank was established and owned by 26 industry super funds. It was sold to Bank of Queensland in 2021. ==Entities==
Entities
As of 2023, all industry funds operate under the legal structure of being a non-profit mutual fund. Industry funds collectively manage the retirement savings for 13 million accounts. All industry funds are governed by trustee boards, with board appointments from employers, trade union representatives, and employees from the relevant industry. Most industry funds are member of the peak body Industry Super Australia. • AustralianSuperCbusHESTAHostplusSpirit SuperCareSuperNGS SuperTWUSUPERFIRSTSuperlegalsuperREI Super Other industry funds Other industry super funds (that are not members of ISA) include Aware Super, Rest Super, and UniSuper. ==Retail super funds==
Retail super funds
Funds that were not historically established by a trade union are known as 'Retail super funds'. Major non-industry super funds include offerings from AMP, Vanguard Group, Commonwealth Bank, National Australia Bank, Suncorp and ING Australia. ==See also==
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