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Australia’s best places to work have been crowned, even as some slash jobs to keep pace with AI and a rapidly changing workforce. SEE THE LIST, HAVE YOUR SAY.
View in browser 28th April 2026
 
SA Business Journal
Top 20 companies to work for in Australia revealed amid job cuts
Australia’s best places to work have been crowned, even as some slash jobs to keep pace with AI and a rapidly changing workforce. SEE THE LIST, HAVE YOUR SAY.
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China is next target for expanding Aussie firm after $20m boost
Mayne Pharma is emerging from its blockbuster takeover battle with US pharmaceuticals giant Cosette by doubling down on its commitment to manufacturing in South Australia.
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Tax reform: Radical plan to save the Aussie dream
Leading economists want income tax to be slashed and the GST to be hiked to 15 per cent, to protect Australia’s way of life as the biggest tax shake-up since the 1990s looms.
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Why a wine crisis is a huge chance for investors
Global investors are circling one of Australia’s iconic wine regions, which has become home to the world’s most affordable premium vineyards.
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Hills properties in fire sale amid Metropolitan Plumbing collapse
Metropolitan Plumbing’s collapse has left its founder’s wife selling down a multimillion-dollar property empire, while her husband staves off potential bankruptcy over unpaid debts...
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Killer payout: Body-bag murderer wins workers’ compo for injury
A recycling plant must make weekly insurance payouts to an injured double murderer after it failed to convince a judge he was a “consummate liar”.
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Big four banks face $1bn bill for rural branch closure crisis
Regional banks have accused the big four of abandoning rural Australia and demanded a cost-sharing model to plug a $1bn annual hole caused by a staggering 900 branch closures.
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Amazon unveils AI ad tool for Australian retailers
Australian retailers can now create sophisticated video advertisements in minutes using Amazon’s new AI generator, but can synthetic content accurately represent real products?
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Petrol stations caught misleading customers named and shamed
Nine petrol stations face fines totalling nearly $8000 for misleading consumers about fuel prices, as the government prepares to increase penalties tenfold.