Human rights at Macquarie

    Macquarie (Macquarie Group Limited and its subsidiaries) respects fundamental human rights as set out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and codified in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, and core International Labour Organisation Conventions. In line with the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, we recognise the duty of states to protect human rights as well as the responsibility of businesses to respect human rights.

    Managing human rights risks

    Macquarie has a framework of policies, programs, and processes in place to identify, mitigate and where relevant, remediate potential and actual human rights impacts, including modern slavery, resulting from our business activities and the relationships connected to those activities (our policy framework). 

    Where local legislation conflicts with the principles and processes in our human rights framework, Macquarie will comply with the law, while also seeking ways to uphold human rights principles within our sphere of influence.

    Governance 

    The Board is responsible for approving Macquarie’s Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) framework including major ESG policies. In accordance with its Charter, the Board Governance and Compliance Committee (BGCC) assists the Board in adopting appropriate governance standards and reviewing the operation of environmental and social risk management policies. Responsibility for implementation of the ESG framework and related Board approved policies resides with Management.

    Under the Code of Conduct, all our people share responsibility for identifying and managing environmental and social issues as part of normal business practice. They are supported by the Environmental and Social Risk (ESR) team, which sits within the Behavioural Risk division of the Risk Management Group and has Group-wide oversight of the Environmental and Social Risk Policy. The ESR team reports to the Chief Risk Officer and to the BGCC on ESG-related matters.

    In relation to environmental and social (including human rights) risks in products and services provided to our customers and clients, our people are supported by the ESR team. Operating and Central Service Groups are responsible for the management of their suppliers and are supported by Group Procurement, which operationalises and advises on the Supplier Governance Framework.

    Macquarie reviews its human rights framework regularly and uplifts where appropriate. Policies and procedures are reviewed periodically and updated if required.  

    Human rights due diligence, processes, and controls 

    Macquarie takes a risk-based approach to identifying and assessing human rights risk in our operations, supply chain, customer and client relationships, and grant partners, focusing on salient risks to people.

    Human rights and modern slavery training

    Targeted training is provided to staff in key Operating and Central Service Groups to support the identification and management of labour and human rights issues.

    Refer to the Spotlight below for further information on our human rights e-learning module. 

    Raising concerns 

    Our people and external parties (including former employees, current or former consultants, contractors, third party providers, auditors, brokers, associates and suppliers) are able to report concerns including human rights impacts and breaches, under the Whistleblower Policy by contacting the Integrity Office, which is an internally independent and confidential function that oversees Macquarie’s Whistleblower Program, at integrityoffice@macquarie.com or by contacting the Integrity Hotline online, or by phone. The Integrity Hotline is externally managed by an experienced and reputable firm and people who make a report can remain anonymous if they wish. The Integrity Hotline is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

    Under Macquarie’s Whistleblower Policy, Macquarie will treat all Protected Disclosures confidentially and will take reasonable steps to protect you if you make a Protected Disclosure, including protection of your identity. Macquarie will take all reasonable steps to ensure that staff and external parties will not be personally disadvantaged or subject to any reprisals by Macquarie as a result of reporting a concern.

    Reflecting our commitment to our customers, Macquarie Bank Limited subscribes to the Australian Banking Association 2019 Banking Code of Practice (as amended). Macquarie has a robust complaint management framework across our retail banking business to resolve customer complaints quickly and fairly. Customers and the public can raise concerns by completing an online form on the Feedback and Complaints web pages.

    Macquarie’s Customer Advocate is separate to the operating, risk and support groups including our internal dispute resolution teams. The Customer Advocate reports directly to the CEO and provides regular reporting to the BGCC.

    Remediation

    Macquarie recognises there are different ways in which an enterprise can be involved or linked to an adverse human rights impact and the associated remediation actions. Our ESR Policy establishes processes for identifying, assessing, managing, mitigating, remediating, and reporting material environmental and social risks, including human rights risks. If Macquarie becomes aware of a client or supplier involved in or linked to an adverse human rights impact, we will consult to understand the remediation actions being undertaken and assess the extent to which these actions will remediate the situation and mitigate reoccurrence.

    Through our Principles for Suppliers and our supplier ESR assurance programme, we are committed to working with our suppliers to remediate non-conformances identified in onsite audits through time bound corrective action plans.

     

    Stakeholder engagement

    Clear dialogue with our stakeholders is important to building strong relationships, maintaining trust and enhancing business performance. We regularly engage with a broad range of stakeholders including clients, shareholders, investors, analysts, governments, regulators, staff, suppliers and the wider community. 

    We are active in a number of external initiatives relevant to addressing modern slavery in the financial sector, including: 

     

    Reporting

    Annually, Macquarie reports under the UK Modern Slavery Act 2015, Australian Modern Slavery Act 2018 (Cth) and the Canadian Fighting Against Forced Labour and Child Labour in Supply Chains Act 2023. Modern slavery involves the most serious forms of human exploitation and takes many forms including: trafficking in persons; slavery; servitude; forced marriage; forced labour; debt bondage; deceptive recruiting for labour or services; and child labour.1 Macquarie’s latest Modern Slavery Statement is linked below.

    Macquarie reports under the Australian Workplace Gender Equality Act, the UK Equality Act 2010 (Gender Pay Gap Information) Regulations 2017, and the ASX Corporate Governance Principles and will continue to meet these requirements. In addition, Macquarie publicly reports on our ESG progress annually.

    Spotlight

    Supplier assurance program

    Since 2018, Macquarie has been implementing an Environmental and Social Risk (ESR) based assurance program which involves in-depth onsite assessments with certain direct suppliers in high-risk jurisdictions and high-risk industries to test alignment with Macquarie’s Principles for Suppliers.

    We are committed to working with our suppliers to remediate any non-conformances through time bound corrective action plans, and to ensure success through follow up audits as necessary. Please refer to our Modern Slavery Transparency Statements and our Supplier Portal for more detail.

     

    Human rights e-learning module

    In collaboration with an expert third-party human rights consultant, since FY2021 Macquarie has developed and deployed a human rights (including modern slavery) e-learning module.

    The training aims to help staff identify, mitigate and escalate negative human rights (including modern slavery) impacts from clients, investments and suppliers. It covers the key indicators that elevate the risk of human rights (including modern slavery) breaches.

    1. “Child labour” means child labour as defined under the applicable local law in each jurisdiction and in ILO Convention No.138 concerning the Minimum Age for Admission to Employment. This also includes the worst forms of child labour as defined in ILO Convention No.182 concerning the Prohibition and Immediate Action for the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child Labour.