|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australia: Workers conditions slashed under new industrial
relations reforms
By Terry Cook
16 June 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
A recent survey by the Howard governments own Office
of the Employment Advocate (OEA) confirms that Australian employers
have lost no time in using the new draconian industrial relation
laws (WorkChoices), which came into force on March 27, to eliminate
longstanding working conditions.
At the beginning of the month, Employment Advocate Peter McIlwain
provided to a Senate estimates hearing a summary of a sample survey
of 250 of the 6,263 Australian Workplace Agreements (AWAs)non-collective
work agreementsregistered with his office in April. It revealed
that every one of them had scrapped at least one formerly protected
award condition, while 16 percent had removed all award conditions.
The survey showed that 40 percent of the work contracts cut
holiday entitlements, 52 percent axed shift loadings, 63 percent
eliminated penalty rates and 64 percent abolished holiday loading
payments. It found that workers covered by 22 percent of the sample
agreements might see a decline in their real wages, since there
was no provision for any increase to compensate for inflation.
Some of the contracts lasted for five years.
In the run-up to the introduction of WorkChoices into parliament
in November last year, the Howard government ran a $55 million
advertising campaign, touting the benefits of the new system.
Just half a year later, the OEA survey makes a mockery of the
claim, heavily promoted in the advertisements, that existing award
conditions would be protected by law.
In reality, WorkChoices strips back to a mere handful the number
of working conditions that used to be legally required in work
contracts. Most are now up for grabs when current agreements expire,
when companies set up new Greenfield sites, or even when new stores
are opened as part of an existing chain.
For example, major fabrics and household retail company Spotlight
used the new IR laws to employ 38 staff on inferior conditions
at its new store in the working class area of Mount Druitt, in
western Sydney. Before being given a start, the workers were obliged
to sign AWAs that would see them paid $543.40 a week, but that
excluded shift penalties and a number of benefits. While the hourly
rate in the new AWAs was 2 cents more than the rate paid to workers
at Spotlights established stores, the loss of penalties
meant that the Mount Druitt workers would receive around $90 a
week less.
Spotlight is currently working to introduce the same conditions
throughout its 100 existing stores. Earlier, the company attempted
to force a longstanding employee to sign a similar AWA, thereby
hoping to set a precedent to be imposed elsewhere.
Justifying the ruthless attack on working conditions and pay
now underway, Prime Minister John Howard made the preposterous
claim that because of our policy (WorkChoices) 38 people
in Mount Druitt have been given a job and they are $338 a week
better off. Howard arrived at that figure by a process of
twisted logicsimply deducting the current unemployment benefit
of $205.30 a week from the wage ($543.40) forced on workers by
Spotlight.
And WorkChoices did not create 38 new jobs in Mount Druitt.
With or without the legislation, Spotlight would most probably
have opened a store there to take advantage of the large market
for its cheap-end range of products. The legislation merely removed
what limited award protections still existed to enable Spotlight
to more ruthlessly exploit a group of unfortunate workers.
The truth is that the governments overall intention has
been to ram through at series of interrelated policies designed
to create a readily available pool of cheap labour. Since 1996
Howard, following on from the previous Labor government, has presided
over the destruction of tens of thousands of full time jobs and
an increasing shift to casual and part-time work.
While the official unemployment rate continues to fall, down
to 4.9 percent in Maythe lowest in 30 yearsthe figure
masks the real situation: high unemployment and underemployment
especially in many large working class centres.
In Mount Druitt, for example, the official unemployment rate
stands at 10 percent. In reality it is far higher. Numbers of
studies have established that when the hidden unemployed
are includedfor example, those deemed employed because they
perform one hours paid work a weekthe jobless rate
leaps to over 12 percent.
The overall unemployment rate also tends to cloak the extremely
high level of youth unemployment. Australian Bureau of Statistics
figures show the national unemployment rate for 15 to 19-year
olds was 20.7 percent in April this year and 21.5 percent in May.
Having created a pool of unemployed, the continued existence
of residual minimal working conditions under the previous IR regimesuch
as shift allowances, overtime penalties, rostered days off and
holiday leavestood in the way of transforming the unemployed
into an outright cheap labour force. WorkChoices has now removed
these barriers. The new IR laws abolish as well minimal unfair
dismissal protection for millions of workers in small businesses,
creating the conditions for employers to intimidate those who
refuse to accept cuts to conditions and wages.
At the same time, increasingly stringent requirements and ever-harsher
breaching penalties have been introduced for social security and
welfare recipients, aimed at driving thousands off benefits and
into low paying jobs.
New measures allow for those on unemployment benefits (Newstart)
to be cut off for eight weeks if they refuse a minimum wage job,
leave a job or fail to turn up for three job centre interviews.
The government is also moving to cut the minimum wage through
its newly constituted Fair Pay Commission.
As a further whip, the Howard government introduced its so-called
welfare to work legislation last year to slash benefits
to people on disability allowances and single parent payments.
These provisions will further swell the ranks of the unemployed
and increase the pressure on ordinary people to accept any work
on offer, just to survive.
While the federal Labor Opposition claims to oppose WorkChoices,
it has nevertheless given its blessing to the vicious regime being
implemented against social security recipients and supported Howards
welfare to work attacks. In other words, it wholeheartedly
backs all those measures that have become an indispensable part
of the governments cheap labour strategy.
See Also:
Australia: Employers rush
to use draconian new industrial relations laws
[12 April 2006]
Australia: Howard's draconian
industrial relations laws come into operation today
[27 March 2006]
Australia: 500,000
workers demonstrate against Howard's industrial legislation
[16 November 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |