logo
‘Fantastic': Australia's big gender gap win

‘Fantastic': Australia's big gender gap win

Perth Now14-06-2025

Australia has recorded its best ever gender equality ranking in a major global report, but the government is being warned not to rest on its laurels.
After placing 24th last year in the World Economic Forum's Global Gender Gap Report, Australia has jumped 11 places and is now 13th out of 148 countries.
It is Australia's best result since the report began in 2006 and a far cry from our country's record low 50th place in 2021.
The ranking jump is attributed to improvements in female political empowerment, economic participation and educational attainment.
Australia ranked well in education, with joint first in literacy rate, primary education enrolment and university enrolment.
Minister for Women Katy Gallagher said it was a 'fantastic result' for Australia. Minister for Women Katy Gallagher celebrated Australia's result. NewsWire / Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia
'When the Albanese Labor Government was first elected in 2022, we said that improving the lives of women and girls was one of our key focuses, and today's result – our best ever – shows we are delivering on that commitment,' Senator Gallagher said.
'Whether it is investing in women's wages and economic opportunities, investing in sexual and reproductive healthcare, or investing in policies to address women's safety and tackling gender-based violence, our government is backing up words with action.'
Parenthood chief executive Georgie Dent celebrated the 'meaningful' changes by the government, but called on them to continue the 'significant work' still to do on measures such as parental leave.
'These results show us that government policy can and does make a tangible difference in achieving the goal of true gender equity and they underscore the need for us to go further,' Ms Dent said. CEO of The Parenthood Georgie Dent called on the government to continue reforms to maintain the progress. NewsWire / Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia
'We're calling on the Albanes Labor Government to build on this progress by increasing paid parental leave entitlement to 52 weeks at replacement wage, with superannuation included – bringing us in line with international best practice.'
Ms Dent also called on the government to cement its promised universal childcare reforms.
'These measures will bring us closer to achieving true gender equity in Australia and in doing so will improve outcomes for children, boost workforce participation, support families and strengthen communities and our economy,' Ms Dent said.
Senator Gallagher acknowledged there would still be more work to come, but insisted the result showed that the Albanese government was 'shifting the dial'.
'We know there is always more work to do, and this report will help to inform our work on gender equality over the next three years,' she said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Three reform scenarios shaping Treasurer Jim Chalmers' tax agenda at upcoming productivity roundtable
Three reform scenarios shaping Treasurer Jim Chalmers' tax agenda at upcoming productivity roundtable

Sky News AU

timean hour ago

  • Sky News AU

Three reform scenarios shaping Treasurer Jim Chalmers' tax agenda at upcoming productivity roundtable

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has foreshadowed significant tax reform, but there are three possible scenarios likely to arise from his upcoming productivity roundtable. The Albanese government's productivity summit in August 2025 will bring together businesses, unions and leaders to discuss potential economic reforms. Mr Chalmers opened the door to major tax changes for the first time in years at the National Press Club on Wednesday, outlining 'progressive and patriotic' reform. According to sources, there are three possible scenarios likely to emerge from the reform push - and each one could shape the future of the tax system. The first scenario sees the best-case outcome for Mr Chalmers - business and other stakeholders unite behind a shared reform agenda. This would give the Albanese government the political cover to act decisively and push ahead with meaningful changes. The second scenario is less rosy, and would result if consensus breaks down and scare campaigns erupt. In such a case, the government would decide to shelve major changes and instead focus on implementing the modest agenda it took to the last election. The third scenario would be the boldest, and it would be that, even in the face of criticism, Mr Chalmers proceeds with tax reform proposals anyway. He would either put these to voters at the next election in 2028 or design a phased system that would not come into effect until after it. Emboldened by Labor's strong electoral mandate, there have been loud calls to lift the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in exchange for income tax cuts. However, Mr Chalmers poured cold water on such a possibility, dampening the hopes of economists who have requested the change for decades. 'Historically I've had a view about the GST. I think it's hard to adequately compensate people,' he told reporters at the National Press Club. 'I think often an increase in the GST is spent three or four times over by the time people are finished with all of the things that they want to do with it. 'But what I'm going to try to do… I'm going to try not to dismiss every idea that I know that people will bring to the roundtable.' Despite this, AMP's chief economist Shane Oliver has since urged Labor to hike the GST and apply it across the board to minimise income tax. 'In an ideal world you would have less reliance on income tax and reduce the disincentive effects associated with it and have more reliance on GST,' he said 'It's seen as a fairly efficient tax because if you're taxing all goods and services at the same rate it doesn't distort people's economic decisions. 'The GST is a good tax. Economists like it because it's neutral.' CPA Australia's chief executive Chris Freeland also urged reform as the tax system remains 'overly reliant on personal and company income tax'. 'We welcome that the Treasurer was careful not to rule in or rule out any changes at this stage,' Mr Freeland said. 'Australians deserve a mature and honest conversation about the trade-offs required to fund the services and resources they expect. 'That must also include examining and fixing the GST and federal-state arrangements.' CreditorWatch's chief economist Ivan Calhoun said the Treasurer expressing a more open attitude towards GST than he, or his predecessors, had in the past was positive. 'He actually used that three letter GST acronym which has just been off the agenda for any political party,' Mr Calhoun said.

US President Donald Trump yet to call Prime Minister Anthony Albanese after G7 cancellation, but meeting still expected
US President Donald Trump yet to call Prime Minister Anthony Albanese after G7 cancellation, but meeting still expected

Sky News AU

timean hour ago

  • Sky News AU

US President Donald Trump yet to call Prime Minister Anthony Albanese after G7 cancellation, but meeting still expected

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese remains without a phone call from Donald Trump after his G7 snub, even though the US President reached out to other countries he cancelled meetings with and met with an Italian soccer team. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has yet to receive a phone call from US President Donald Trump after their meeting was cancelled at the G7 summit in Canada. After the planned bilateral was abruptly cancelled so President Trump could address the Middle East conflict, he reached out to India and Mexico. As of Saturday, Mr Albanese had not received a phone call from President Trump, even though he contacted Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum. There has been no indication that President Trump has contacted other cancelled counterparts, such as South Korean President Lee Jae-myung, or Mr Albanese. The Albanese government has suggested there is no cause for concern, despite the highly visible diplomatic snub. A meeting between the two leaders is still agreed to, according to senior government sources - and the question now is simply when, not if. There is much cooperation defence space between the US and Australia and this meeting will happen, government sources believe. While President Trump rushed home from the G7 due to tensions in the Middle East, his schedule back in Washington included a puzzling detour to meet an Italian soccer team. President Trump met with players from Juventus FC, who were in the US for the Club World Cup. He questioned Juventus FC players for their view on transgender athletes, asking, 'Could a woman make your team, fellas?' 'We have a very good women's team,' General manager Damien Comolli responded. President Trump said: 'You do, but they should be playing with women… He's being very diplomatic." The brief and awkward exchange followed President Trump's executive order from earlier this year banning transgender athletes from women's and girls' sports — Anthony Albanese (@AlboMP) June 17, 2025 Despite the absence of a face-to-face with the US President, Mr Albanese was still able to use the G7 summit to press the case on trade with members of the Trump administration. Mr Albanese held two 20-minute meetings with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer. The government reiterated its argument that tariffs on Australian goods make little economic sense, saying that only four per cent of exports go to the United States. Meanwhile, beef exports to the US rose 91 per cent year-on-year from April to April - even as US tariffs took effect from early April. One emerging theory among sources was that President Trump simply has little interest in multilateral forums. Sources suggest he dislikes summits like the G7, where tensions with European and Asian allies are more likely to flare. Given President Trump's differences with many world leaders, there is a view that the meeting was almost like the G6 - plus the US. Despite the cancelled meeting and lack of follow-up contact, officials remain hopeful a rescheduled Trump-Albanese meeting can still take place. The UN General Assembly in New York in September has shaped up as the next likely opportunity.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to attend string of high-level summits around the world amid global uncertainty and international conflicts
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to attend string of high-level summits around the world amid global uncertainty and international conflicts

Sky News AU

timean hour ago

  • Sky News AU

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to attend string of high-level summits around the world amid global uncertainty and international conflicts

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is preparing to attend more than half a dozen overseas trips or conferences by the end of 2025, Sky News Australia can reveal. Mr Albanese will attend the APEC forum in Korea, ASEAN summit in Malaysia, COP climate conference in Brazil, and the G20 summit in South Africa. He is also expected to visit China at the invitation of President Xi Jinping, speak at the UN General Assembly in New York, and attend the Pacific Islands Forum in the Solomon Islands. Mr Albanese sees the trips as essential at a time when there is so much upheaval in the world, with a war in the Middle East and another in Ukraine. The busy schedule comes after Mr Albanese earned the moniker 'Airbus Albo' in his first term of government, just as former prime minister Kevin Rudd was branded 'Kevin 747'. The Australian government originally helped set up APEC, and the G20 is a forum every Australian prime minister always attends. The COP summit in Brazil is necessary, given Australia bidding to host a future UN climate conference. That trip will likely be paired with the G20. Mr Albanese is also expected to use the UN General Assembly in New York as the best opportunity to secure a rescheduled face-to-face meeting with US President Donald Trump. The two leaders' planned first meeting at the G7 in Kananaskis, Canada was abruptly cancelled last week, prompting criticism of Mr Albanese's lack of engagement with President Trump. Mr Albanese considered attending the NATO summit in The Hague to revive the meeting, but it has been confirmed that Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles will attend instead. The Albanese government's view is that President Trump has agreed to a meeting, and it will take place at an appropriate time. The visit to China is also seen as an important step, given the size of the trading relationship between the two countries. On his first trip to China in the last term of parliament, the Prime Minister ensured he visited the United States beforehand where he met with then-president Joe Biden. That was another reason the highly anticipated meeting with President Trump had been so important for the Albanese government. Since being re-elected in May, Mr Albanese has already travelled to Indonesia to meet President Prabowo Subianto and to Rome for the Mass swearing in the new Pope Leo. He also visited Nadi, Fiji to meet Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka; Seattle, USA to meet Amazon Web Service CEO Matt Garman; and Kanaskis, Canada for the G7 Summit. In the absence of Mr Trump, Mr Albanese instead held two short meetings on the sidelines of the G7 with key members of the Trump administration. He also met with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store