Sunday, November 3, 2024

Spare us the talk about a wages explosion. There’s nothing wrong with lifting Australia’s lowest wages in line with inflation

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What is it with the Coalition and wages?

When, in the final days of the 2022 election campaign, the then-opposition leader Anthony Albanese backed an increase in award wages to keep pace with inflation, his opposite number in the Coalition, prime minister Scott Morrison called him a “loose unit“.

“He just runs off at the mouth, it’s like he just unzips his head and lets everything fall on the table,” Morrison said.

Allowing the wages of low-paid Australians to climb with inflation would:

“Make interest rates rise even higher, it would threaten the strong growth we have had in employment, and ultimately it would force small businesses, potentially, out of business altogether.”

Now, two years on, after yet another Fair Work Commission decision that lifted award wages in line with inflation, the Coalition has returned to the fray.

On Monday, shadow finance minister Jane Hume asked Treasury Secretary Steven Kennedy at a Senate hearing how he could support a wage increase linked to inflation at a time when productivity growth was uncertain.

Shadow finance minister Jane Hume wanted to know how Treasury Secretary Steven Kennedy could support a wage increase.(ABC News: Matt Roberts)

She was, she said, just asking for Treasury’s position.

The Fair Work Commission had just given Australia’s lowest-paid workers a 3.75 per cent increase.

The approach goes back some time. In 2014 the Coalition’s recently installed industrial relations minister Eric Abetz warned of something akin to the “wages explosions” of the 1970s and early 1980s unless “weak-kneed” employers stood up to unions.

At the time, only 17 per cent of Australian workers were members of unions, down from more than half in the early 1980s. It’s now just 12 per cent.

Far from setting off a wages explosion, increases in award wages (those awarded by the Fair Work Commission to predominately low-paid workers) appear to barely move the dial at all.

Last year the Commission awarded low-paid workers 5.75 per cent. In the year that followed, overall wages climbed 4.1 per cent. The previous year the Commission awarded 5.2 per cent. In the year that followed, overall wages climbed 3.7 per cent.

Overall wages – those received by the three quarters of workers who aren’t paid by awards – have been climbing by less than awards, and for most of the past three years, by less than the rate of inflation.

Window reflection of shoppers carrying bags in Rundle Mall.

Wages have been climbing by less than awards.(ABC News: Che Chorley)

Conditions were ripe for pay rises

It isn’t because the conditions haven’t been right. For the past two years, unemployment has been lower than it has been in the previous four decades.

From 1974 right through until 2022 unemployment never fell below 4 per cent, and rarely fell below 5 per cent. Yet the past two years haven’t sparked a wages explosion.

It should have been one of the easiest times in our lives to walk into a new higher-paying job, yet the share of us doing that has dived from almost 20 per cent per year at the start of the 1990s to less than 10 per cent today.

At the peak of what was then the biggest mining boom in a century in 2012, only 6,200 Australians were crossing the Nullarbor to live in Western Australia. Five times as many new arrivals were pouring into Western Australia from overseas.

In the past year, in the midst of a new and bigger mining boom, only a net 11,200 Australians have moved west for a better life.

Our remarkable passivity when it comes to moving to earn more and our lack of interest in joining unions has collided with a wage-setting system that for those of us not on awards makes it easy for employers to resist paying more.

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Workers are finding it hard to bargain

Individual contracts are usually offered on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. Those of us not interested in leaving (most of us) take them.

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