The question of who controls artificial intelligence at work has moved out of the boardroom and into the fine print of enterprise agreements. According to The Australian, several of the country’s superannuation funds are now writing AI clauses directly into their enterprise bargaining agreements, giving staff a formal say in how the technology is rolled out.
It is a small development with outsized implications. Enterprise agreements, or EBAs, are the legally binding documents that set pay and conditions for hundreds of thousands of Australian workers. When a clause on artificial intelligence lands in one, it stops being an aspiration in a corporate slide deck and becomes an enforceable term of employment. That shift, from policy to contract, is what makes the super fund clauses worth watching.
Why super funds, and why now
Superannuation is a natural place for this fight to surface. The sector sits at the intersection of finance, administration and member services, precisely the kind of process-heavy, document-heavy work that generative AI is being pitched to automate. Call centres, claims handling, compliance checks and member correspondence are all squarely in the frame. Funds are under relentless pressure to cut costs and lift returns for members, and AI vendors are promising exactly that. For the people doing the work, the promise reads more like a threat.
The clauses reported by The Australian are an attempt to get ahead of that anxiety rather than argue about it after the fact. Broadly, agreements of this kind commit an employer to consult staff before deploying AI systems that affect their jobs, to be transparent about what the technology is being used for, and in some cases to guarantee that AI will not be used to make final decisions about a person’s employment without human oversight. Some go further, promising retraining or redeployment where roles are automated away.
None of this is unique to superannuation. The Finance Sector Union has spent the past two years pushing AI protections into finance-industry bargaining, and unions internationally have chased similar language as chatbots and copilots move from pilots into production. What the super fund deals show is that the idea has crossed from union wishlist into signed, dated documents.
Two ways to read the clauses
Employers and unions tell very different stories about what these terms mean. For unions, an AI clause is a guardrail. The argument runs that workers have a right to know when an algorithm is scoring their performance, triaging their emails or drafting the letters they used to write, and that automation should not be sprung on staff as a fait accompli. Consultation rights, they say, are the difference between technology that augments a job and technology that quietly hollows it out. The clauses also create a paper trail: if a fund later sheds roles and blames efficiency, the union has a contractual hook to demand answers.
Employers, and the industrial relations lawyers who advise them, tend to see the same words as a potential handbrake. Their concern is that overly prescriptive language could force a business to consult, and effectively seek permission, before adopting tools that competitors are already using. In a sector where margins are measured in basis points and members punish underperformance by switching funds, the ability to move quickly on productivity matters. The counter-argument from management is usually that good consultation is already best practice, and that a clause simply formalises what a well-run fund would do anyway. The friction is in the detail: how binding the consultation is, who arbitrates a dispute, and whether “AI” is even defined tightly enough to be enforceable.
What it means for Australia
For Australian workplaces beyond superannuation, these clauses are a preview. The country is heading into a broader reckoning over how AI is governed at work, and the industrial relations system is shaping up as one of the main battlegrounds. The federal government has been consulting on AI regulation and on so-called high-risk uses of the technology, but legislation moves slowly. Enterprise bargaining moves faster, and it is happening now, agreement by agreement, across banks, insurers, universities and the public service.
That creates a distinctly Australian dynamic. Unlike jurisdictions that lean on top-down statutory rules, Australia has a mature, adversarial bargaining framework that unions can use to write AI terms into contracts long before Canberra settles on a national approach. If the super fund clauses hold up and set a template, expect the language to spread quickly to other white-collar sectors where the same automation pressures apply. Employer groups will push back hard, warning that a patchwork of bespoke clauses across thousands of agreements could leave Australian firms slower to adopt productivity-boosting tools than overseas rivals. The Productivity Commission has already flagged that AI is central to lifting the country’s stubbornly weak productivity growth, which sharpens the tension between protecting workers and not kneecapping the very technology meant to help them.
There is also a governance angle that cuts close to home for the funds themselves. Superannuation trustees have obligations to act in members’ best financial interests. If AI can genuinely lower costs and improve service, a fund arguably has a duty to use it. Balancing that against commitments made to staff in an EBA is not a trivial exercise, and it is one boards will need to think through rather than delegate to a vendor demo.
What’s next
The near-term question is whether these clauses are the leading edge of a trend or a handful of one-offs. Bargaining rounds are already under way across large slabs of the finance and services economy, and unions will be watching to see whether the super fund language becomes a floor to build on. Employers, for their part, will be watching how the clauses behave in practice, and in particular whether any dispute over an AI rollout ends up tested before the Fair Work Commission. The first arbitrated case will tell everyone a great deal about how much these words are actually worth.
Either way, the significance is hard to overstate. Australia is quietly running one of the first real-world experiments in bargaining over artificial intelligence, not in theory but in enforceable contracts covering ordinary workers. How it plays out in superannuation may well set the tone for how the rest of the workforce meets the machines.
Sources: The Australian

















































