Grappler Deep State Feller wrote on Sep 20
th, 2015 at 12:52pm:
RandomCrook wrote on Sep 20
th, 2015 at 12:13pm:
I do think you deserve Sunday penalty rates, I survive on it myself. But I'm looking about this from their point of view.
Telling people that they are going to scrap something is a lot different from telling people they are going to move it. It's about pissing less people off.
Yes - but moving it to a day when they wouldn't be working anyway is just a sneaky move to get the same result. They don't run football finals on Monday - all the best entertainment over holidays is not on off days of the week when everyone else is working - all the best parts of the Royal Easter Show, the New Year's fireworks etc.. are all on Sundays/Saturdays or Public Holidays - this strand of penalty rates is to compensate for losing the chance to do those things, etc. It's a long-established system and has no need for change.
What IS needed is - as someone here says - more capital productivity -meaning we need to chop off at the knees all this wazste on boards and ceos and such from 'privatisation' and chop off offshore investment that Australia and Australians could invest in for themselves.
Australians are just as capable of taking a business plan to banks and getting the investment capital to develop resource mining etc - allowing offshore companies residing in tax havens to come in and do it is only robbing yourself, without even the chance of getting it back on insurance.
Only a fool would do that, and that sums up the approach of respective governments here over the past thirty plus years.
BOTR.
"Sneaky move to get the same result" what do you think politics is about, without it William Wilberforce would of never been able to implicitly ban slavery, though a lot of bad policies have come in because of it eg Thatcherism/Reganism
Businesses don't care about how you spend your weekends(unless it affects your work ability) or what sports team you support, they are only after the bottom line.
Think about the industry at hand manufacturing, finance, accounting, resources, logistics, ICT, IT and energy. There busy days are from Monday to Friday. So it makes sense to have penalty rates on Sunday and Saturday.
But Hospitality and retail busy times are from Thursdays to Sunday.Therefore it is reasonable that there penalty rates should be Monday, Tuesday.
What's hindering businesses from opening for longer hours and hiring extra staff to churn out more customers is wages, so you won't have to be waiting in an hour long queue for food and beverages for "all the best entertainment over holidays ".