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Employers In Row Over Wage Boost Bid (Read 212 times)
whiteknight
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Employers In Row Over Wage Boost Bid
Oct 23rd, 2022 at 5:14pm
 
Employers move against Labor law in row over ‘wage boost’ bid

Sydney Morning Herald
October 21, 2022


Employers will mount a joint campaign against imminent changes to workplace laws in a bid to stop federal Labor forcing companies to submit to industry-wide wage deals amid fears the new regime would lead to more strikes and higher costs.

Industry chiefs are warning jobs will be lost if the new workplace laws enforce “multi-employer bargaining”, giving union leaders a trigger to call strike action across entire sectors in a way that is banned under current law.

Employment and Workplace Relations Minister Tony Burke (right) is calling his plan a “better pay” law.


At stake is a pledge from Labor to “get wages moving” by overhauling the workplace regime when Tuesday’s federal budget will confirm a fall in real wages in the year ahead because inflation is eroding salaries.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese went to the election with a promise to boost wages and Employment and Workplace Relations Minister Tony Burke is calling his plan a “better pay” law, setting up a dispute over whether the government or employers should carry the cost of lifting household incomes.

Business Council of Australia chief Jennifer Westacott has hardened her objections to the workplace laws in a push with the Australian Industry Group and the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry to gain changes to the bill before it goes to parliament in the coming week.

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“We want wages to go up but that won’t be achieved by creating more complexity, more strikes and higher unemployment,” she said.

In a full-day session on Thursday, officials from unions and employer groups were briefed on and allowed to read the “Secure Jobs, Better Pay Bill”, which runs to several hundred pages, as long as they did not take a copy.

With several officials signing agreements not to disclose what they knew, the debate over the reform is yet to engage in crucial details about when many employers might have to negotiate a common enterprise bargaining agreement with a union.






A feature of the bill, according to officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the legal agreements, is that it sets up separate “streams” for different kinds of employers, but one source said this was already creating confusion.

One of the government’s stated objectives is to improve wages in sectors such as childcare and aged care where many of the workers are women, salaries are low compared to other sectors and many employers receive federal assistance.

Business Council of Australia chief Jennifer Westacott has hardened her objections to the workplace laws.


These employers would be placed in a stream with tougher obligations compared to industries that did not rely so heavily on direct or indirect federal funding.

Burke has left room to amend the draft bill after feedback from industry and unions and a likely Senate inquiry once it is introduced to parliament.

“They always result in various amendments to what’s put forward,” he said of the consultations.


Business Council of Australia chief executive Jennifer Westacott said multi-employer bargaining wasn’t a solution for female-dominated, low-paid sectors.
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“So there’s ongoing revision that occurs in this process and then after it’s been introduced, you go through the normal Senate inquiry process as well.”

As well as the industry-wide bargaining changes, the bill aims to ban pay secrecy clauses so companies cannot prohibit staff from talking about their pay, make gender equity an objective of the Fair Work Act, establish new “expert panels” at the Fair Work Commission to address the gender pay gap, and give the commission more authority to order pay increases for workers in sectors dominated by female workers.

ACTU secretary Sally McManus put the multi-employer bargaining idea on the agenda on August 24 with a warning about the “simmering anger” among workers who had seen their incomes fall in real terms for years, leading to a debate about the reform at the government’s jobs summit.

While business groups took different approaches at first, with ACCI and Ai Group more vigorous in their objections than the BCA, the groups are uniting with a joint statement on Saturday to express “deep reservations” at the multi-employer bargaining changes.

“Any broader system of multi-employer bargaining must be voluntary and cannot lead to another layer of ill-suited, industry-wide terms and conditions,” the three groups will say.

Ai Group chief Innes Willox says the changes in their current form will cost jobs by making conditions more difficult for employers.
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Grappler Truth Teller Feller
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Re: Employers In Row Over Wage Boost Bid
Reply #1 - Oct 23rd, 2022 at 5:29pm
 
So how would jobs be lost in sector bargaining?  The work would suddenly vanish and the need of the boss to make a profit would disappear?

If people in some enterprises would get a wage boost, then clearly some enterprises are not playing the game properly.

"Ooooh - hissy fit ... I'll take the investment money elsewhere!  And employ people anyway...."  (DUH)....

So the employers are admitting they are gaining an unfair advantage out of enterprise bargaining.....  we accept their white flag.
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“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
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John Smith
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Re: Employers In Row Over Wage Boost Bid
Reply #2 - Oct 23rd, 2022 at 5:53pm
 
Geez, the business lobby is upset that employees are given a bigger voice. Who here is surprised?  Cheesy
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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