|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australian government to close state-run job agency
By Barry Jobson
25 June 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
A month has passed since Australian Treasurer Peter Costello
presented the May 2002 budget. While budget measures such as tougher
eligibility criteria for disability pensions and increased charges
for pharmaceutical items have been the subject of ongoing comment
and criticism, little has been said about the decision to close
Employment National (EN), the government-owned job agency.
The media has largely ignored the announcement that all 120
Employment National offices will close by next June, destroying
750 fulltime and 450 casual jobs and ending all direct government
responsibility for assisting the unemployed to find work. None
of the opposition partiesLabor, the Democrats or the Greenshave
raised the slightest objection.
The closure of Employment National, the remains of the Commonwealth
Employment Service (CES), completes one more step in dismantling
the post-war welfare system. Job assistance and placement will
now be entirely in the hands of the private sector and run on
a commercial basis with the needs of the unemployed completely
subordinated to the requirements of profit.
Under the fully privatised job assistance network, the unemployed
will be further stripped of their rights and coerced into low-paid,
casual and part-time jobs in line with the needs of big business.
Those who object in any way, by refusing job offers or by breaching
their contract with a private provider, face heavy fines or being
cut off benefits altogether.
The government-run social security agency, Centrelink, currently
imposes penalties on the unemployed on the basis of recommendations
from private job agencies, whose interest lies in pushing their
clients into any type of work in order to collect
lucrative placement fees.
In the three-year period since job assistance was largely privatised,
thousands of unemployed people have been penalised, many for trivial
offences. A report by the Australian Council of Social Services
(ACOSS) last August estimated that 349,100 people had been breached
in 2000/01an increase of 189 percent since 1997-98 when
the figure was 120,718. The government gouged an estimated $258.8
million in penalties from those who were breached.
The impact of such breaches on the unemployed, who are struggling
to survive on minimal welfare assistance, is severe. For a first
breach, which may only involve failing to attend an interview
with the private job provider, single adults suffer an 18 percent
reduction in their welfare benefit for 26 weeksa penalty
of $850. From July 1, the system will become even more draconian.
Those who miss an interview will have their benefit immediately
suspended.
The ACOSS report stated that the most disadvantaged jobseekerssome
of the most vulnerable people in our societywere
being trapped in a maze of bureaucratic requirements and
are suffering tremendous financial hardship as a result of the
penalties they receive. These included people with learning
skills, the mentally impaired, people with disabilities and indigenous
people.
The decision to close Employment National completes a lengthy
process. The previous Labor government began outsourcing the tasks
performed by the CES to private agencies. When the Liberal-National
coalition came to office in 1996, the assault intensified. In
1998 the Howard government announced the closure of the CES and
the slashing of 3,300 jobs. Its replacement Employment National
had just over 1,000 staff.
The government insisted that its decision was to ensure that
the unemployed had the freedom to choose between a state-run agency
and a private provider. Its intention, however, was always to
shut Employment National once a network of private agencies had
been established.
From the outset Employment National worked at a disadvantage.
Under the new arrangements, it was forced to submit tenders and
compete with a least 13 private agencies, mostly run by charity-based
organisations, such as the Salvation Army, Mission Australia,
the Brotherhood of Saint Laurence and the Samaritan-run Job Futuresall
highly favoured by the Howard government.
In the 1998 tendering, the government awarded a total of 306
contracts worth $1.5 billion, with the lions share going
to private providers. When it sought to renew contracts in 2000,
Employment National lost almost all of its more lucrative intensive
assistance work to private sector providers and was left only
with the less profitable job matching functions.
Since then Employment National has progressively wound back
its operations, reduced its staff and negotiated its exit from
leasing arrangements for a number of office sites. Only a skeleton
staff operated many of its offices and in some cases only one
employee was rostered to turn the lights on and off. In April,
Employment Nationals chief executive Susan Williams suddenly
resigned without explanation.
Even though the decision to close Employment National was clearly
made some time ago, the public has been deliberately kept in the
dark. When chief executive Martin Baird was asked in April about
rumors of an impending closure or severe staff cutbacks, he refused
to comment, saying such information was company confidential.
He then admitted, however, that a program to reduce leased office
space had been in place for some time.
Even though the warning signs were evident, the Community and
Public Sector Union (CPSU), which represents public sector workers,
said and did nothing. Once the decision had been announced, the
union blithely declared in a bulletin that the closure comes
as no surprise. The bulletin then stated: The union
will work with management to ensure the earmarked closure of Employment
National on June 30 next year is managed effectively and that
all staff receive their full entitlements and their full range
of options.
In other words, the CPSU will conduct no fight to defend jobs
and will collaborate with management to ensure staff members are
bundled out of the door as efficiently as possible. The unions
attitude also comes as no surprise. Over the last decade, the
CPSU has cooperated with both Labor and Liberal governments to
oversee and manage effectively the destruction of
more than 100,000 federal public sector jobs.
See Also:
Interview on closure of Australian job
agency: "The government's concern is to drive people off
benefits"
[25 June 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |