Super giants spent $400m of retirement funds on marketing as CFMEU, associates pocket savings

Neale PriorThe West Australian
Camera IconMELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 27: CFMEU members march in protest on August 27, 2024 in Melbourne, Australia. Thousands of union members across Victoria participated in a march on Tuesday morning to show solidarity with the Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU). The strikes come in response to new legislation that forces the CFMEU to accept administration following allegations of criminal links and corruption. The new legislation, which passed the Senate with support from the Opposition, gives the relevant minister the power to appoint an administrator. The CFMEU has criticized the law, saying it stripped members of the right to a fair process and has flagged a legal fight. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese dismissed the union's criticism, stating that it is "business as usual from the CFMEU". (Photo by Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images) Credit: Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images

Australia’s superannuation are spending more than $400 million of members’ savings on marketing each year as they line the pockets of related unions and industry bodies.

Previously secret data revealed industry super paid $10.8m to their union masters in 2022-23, with the biggest beneficiary being the CFMEU with almost $3.9m of payments ahead of miners breaking away from the crisis-riddle union.

Figures released by the Australian Pde

, with the crisis hit as new figures reveal big spending by , with the crisis-hit CFMEU and sporting

Previously secret data reveals that the industry funds paid $10.8m to their union masters, with the CFMEU being the biggest winner thanks form and handed aligned industry groups more than $3.4.

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almost $3.9m to its union masters in the 2022-23 financial year, including $233,035 to the Victorian construction division at the heart of a Federal administrator being appointment

Information released by the Federal regulator on Wednesday revealed that the giant industry fund AustralianSuper was by far the biggest marketing spender in the 2022-23 financial year, forking out a total of $60.2m on promotional work.

This included $43m of what AustralianSuper said was advertising or marketing, with $7.4m going to search engine giant Google, and $16.9m of member funds on member campaigns — including $6.3m spent through lobby group Industry Super Australia.

CBUS’ $34.7m marketing spend included more than $2.3m of sponsorship of related unions and industry groups, including $233,055 pumped into the CFMEU’s controversial Victorian division and a total of almost $800,000 sent to the union across Australia

The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority has released the detailed breakdown of super fund spending as part of attempts to improve the transparency of groups managing around $3 trillion of retirement savings.

The Queensland-based industry fund giant Australian Retirement Trust was the second biggest marketing spender, with a spend of $41.8m.

Industry funds Hesta, HostPlus and Aware Super all spent more than $30m on marketing.

HostPlus handed over $1.8m of member savings to pay for its sponsorship deal with the AFL and $1.3 million for its sponsorship of the battling Gold Coast Suns.

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