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IR reform - it's not in the detail

By Des Moore - posted Wednesday, 10 August 2005


The Federal Government’s announcements of changes to workplace relations regulation have left many important details unclear, including the precise future role of the AIRC, which they have decided to retain. Indeed, one is tempted to say the reform gun was only half-cocked when it was let off in May.

Before considering some of the pellets that have fallen out of the reform gun barrel, it is relevant to recall that 20 or so industrial “ayatollahs” (according to Justice Michael Kirby) wrote to the prime minister last November (and subsequently) to suggest the government establish a commission of inquiry to report on the advantages and disadvantages of giving workers and employers maximum freedom to negotiate the terms of employment contracts.

We proposed such an inquiry because we felt there would be extensive opposition to labour market deregulation and the supporting arguments needed to be well canvassed in advance in the public arena. We judged that government ministers could have difficulty in getting across the rationale for the changes. Our proposal was rejected. But why - and what has been the outcome?

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With the benefit of hindsight and odd whisperings from Canberra, my belief now is the government did not commission a public report or issue a white paper, as it had already decided it would be too risky politically, because it assessed there would be insufficient support for deregulation from the business community, as well as the usual opposition from most of the media.

The prime minister admitted recently the proposed changes “are not radical” and after they have been implemented, “Australia’s labour market will still be more regulated than those in the UK and New Zealand”. He omitted to mention the even less regulated US labour market.

It is not often I agree with ACTU Secretary Greg Combet, but his assertion the government has not put the economic case for the changes is not the complete ambit claim unions are wont to make. Much of the government’s supportive publicity consists either of a defensive response justifying the changes on the remarkable basis that many existing regulations will remain or denying ACTU claims.

One possible reason for not promoting positive effects may be that the potential increase in labour demand is expected to be small. The government has not argued that the participation rate will increase and no revision has been made to the prior budget forecasts of a fall in that rate in 2005-06 and a slower increase in employment over the next three years. Yet in the election campaign the prime minister rightly emphasised that increasing workforce participation would make an important contribution to reducing the so-called “generation gap”. So Mr Howard has had to fall back to justifying the changes by generalisations, such as they will “remove impediments to further job creation” and create “a new burst of productivity” or, more recently, that unemployment will fall below 5 per cent (from its existing 5.1 per cent), which appears to run counter to the budget estimates.

Indeed, although ministers have made frequent reference to the $3.6 billion expenditure on the 16 Welfare to Work measures, the budget papers do not suggest any expected net addition to the supply of labour and the recent estimates hearings failed to extract any figure from officials. What we do know, however, is the budget provides for a 29 per cent increase in assistance to the unemployed and no reduction in total social security spending from the extraordinarily high proportion of GDP already allocated (9.4 per cent) over the next three years. In short, on the basis of the budget, it seems we can expect an increase in unemployment and in welfare numbers generally.

The limited extent of the changes in workplace relations, and the lack of detail about them, has also increased the difficulty of “selling” them. But enough has been said to allow unions and the Labor Party to run a scare campaign. Moreover, the apparent continuation of a considerable amount of regulation is making it easier for Labor to say that it will reverse many of the changes.

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The decision to continue determining the minimum wage on a not dissimilar basis to the existing one is probably the worst feature of the proposals. And the government says decisions of the new commission will be guided by parameters set in legislation to “establish a better balance between fair pay and employment”. This, it claims, will avoid the existing adversarial process.

But this is highly misleading. Whatever parameters are legislated will not avoid controversy over the weight that should be given to this or that guideline. Moreover, the naming of the new body as a commission to determine “fair pay”, the requirement that it balance fairness against employment, and the suggestion that it will operate along the lines of the UK Low Pay Commission, indicate Australia will continue to have a minimum that is high relative to the average wage. At 58 per cent of the median, Australia already has the second highest minimum after France among OECD countries and much higher than Spain (30 per cent), Japan (32 per cent) or the US (34 per cent). And, while the UK minimum is lower at 43 per cent of the median, the latest LPC decision leaves it at exactly the same relative rate as when that body was established.

The key point here is the maintenance of a high minimum in Australia will severely limit the scope for increasing the employment of those looking for work. ABS surveys show that, in addition to the 550,000 unemployed, there are another 550,000 under-employed, plus a further 800,000 who are not actively looking for work but say they would be able to start within four weeks if jobs became available. In short, almost two million want work or more of it. But as many of these are unskilled, their capacity to obtain jobs is importantly dependent on employers being legally able to offer a wage commensurate with their lower productivity. Such employment would in turn provide the training that would offer the potential for higher wages to be earned down the track.

Moreover, the opportunity is being missed to remove the charade that the minimum wage is an important social policy instrument. To the contrary, it is grossly unfair to have a regulation that actually inhibits the legal employment of many at the bottom of the income spectrum. At present, no wage is allowed to be paid between the minimum of around $25,000 a year and the unemployment benefit of close to $11,000 (for a single adult) and the proposals hold out little prospect of a significant change in this situation. And social unfairness will remain, with the minimum wage continuing to be provided to the more than half of low wage earners who are in the top half of household incomes. The prime minister implicitly acknowledged this unfairness when he said, “Minimum wage workers are not concentrated in low-income households. A significant proportion live in households with relatively high incomes.”

The serious problems with the minimum wage proposal also raise a question about continuing to regulate wages above the minimum. At present the AIRC makes an absurd number of awards setting some 20,000 separate wage rates that purport to provide a safety net that, unbelievably, extends to wages in excess of $1,000 per week. The government says it will hold an inquiry into this situation and Minister Andrews has indicated he hopes the number of awards could be reduced to “a few hundred”.

The most hopeful features of the promised new regime are that it will exempt businesses with up to 100 employees from unfair dismissal claims and make it easier to enter into less-regulated individual and collective agreements. Indeed, the prime minister indicated the first objective of the changes is to “encourage the further spread of workplace agreements”.

Accordingly, there will be a replacement of the existing requirement that agreements must contain no overall reduction in the terms and conditions set by awards - the so-called “no-disadvantage” test. In its place agreements will be required only to meet the minimum “protected” conditions to be laid down in legislation, plus of course the minimum wage set by the FPC. These protected conditions cover “4 weeks annual leave, personal-carers leave, parental leave, and a maximum number of 38 ordinary working hours per week”. This reduction in award-imposed requirements certainly seems an improvement, although it remains to be seen to what extent workplace negotiations on new agreements result in a diminution of existing award conditions, such as leave loadings and RDOs.

There is also a question as to whether unions will be able to force a literal interpretation of the legislated minima for leave and hours. Will employers and employees be able to continue existing arrangements under which 21 per cent of existing employees work for no paid leave and 4.5 million people work over 38 hours? Or will the legislation make some provision for exemption from the protected conditions?

A highly important associated question arises as to what roles the “new” AIRC and the Federal Court will play. For the government to say the AIRC will now “focus on disputes” tells us nothing of substance because that is exactly what it has been doing for the past century. Both the AIRC and its Federal Court soul mate have engaged in decision-making on workplace relations that has been based on assumptions and beliefs that have had serious adverse effects on employment and productivity. These decision-makers have operated on the totally erroneous basis that tribunals and courts have social policy responsibilities independent of parliament and they need to play an interventionist role, because they perceive a major imbalance of bargaining power between employers and employees.

If, as seems almost certain, the new legislation continues to contain extensive regulatory clauses, it seems likely that there will continue to be considerable scope for disputes over its interpretation and for one-sided interpretive judicial decision-making. The fact the right to strike will be maintained will in itself ensure the AIRC has an on-going role unless the new legislation imposes some watertight limit to its capacity to intervene. A similar problem could arise in regard to disputes over the trade union rights to enter business premises under, for example, states’ occupational health and safety legislation.

And, even if its role is limited, will anything be done to stop the Federal Court extending its already large role in “interpreting” not only the new workplace relations legislation but other existing legislation and court decisions that are relevant?

This is pertinent to unfair dismissals claims, a large proportion of which are not contested in courts, because of the widespread belief that judicial attitudes do not favour employers.

Employees may, for example, be able to bring what are in effect claims that they received “unreasonable notice”. Even with the unfair dismissals regime in place, each year a large number of such claims are made against Victorian employers, with around 1,000 a year actually going to courts and, contrary to ACTU assertions, costs are awarded if cases are sustained. There are also an increasing number of cases under the Trade Practices Act seeking to convert pre-contractual representations into promises that must be fulfilled.

Finally, the Federal Court will retain an “unlawful” termination jurisdiction on grounds of discrimination (i.e. sex, age, disability, and so on). Given current attitudes in the AIRC and the Federal Court, the concern here is that attempts will be made by the judiciary to extend these jurisdictions as substitutes for unfair dismissal exemptions.

In short, whether the proposal to exempt a large proportion of businesses from unfair dismissal claims will have much substantive effect is unclear given the on-going problem with the existing judicial arrangements. The Federal Government’s proposals give no indication of even recognising this is a very serious problem that significantly limits the scope for improving Australia’s economic and social situation.

Finally, there is a question of whether the proposals justify establishing a national workplace relations regime by using the corporations power, which if successful then overrides the application to companies of state regulatory legislation and state industrial commission interpretations.

Understandably, this has added to growing concerns in some quarters at the increasing tendency for the Commonwealth to centralise decision-making in Canberra. However, if a genuinely deregulated national system of workplace relations was being proposed I would see it less as an attack on the powers of states and more as an attack on the rampant protectionism that surrounds the labour market. Such a national system would, in my view, be as important an advance as the implementation of free trade between states and, if able to operate for a few years, would be unlikely to be reversed by a Labor government. The problem with the existing proposals is they continue a centralised system of extensive regulation of the labour market that will be readily increasable by an incoming Labor government.

In summary, from what we know of the proposed changes they are a serious disappointment and will offer only a limited increase in the flexibility in relations between employers and employees that Australia sorely needs. A labour market expert from the US, Professor Charles Baird, recently visited Australia to advise on the extent of regulation in the US and to inform himself on Australian situation. I conclude with his final words in an article in the Australian Financial Review on July 14:

Many liberals hoped that with control of the Senate, Howard would move towards significant deregulation of the labour market … Their hopes have been dashed. A golden opportunity has been lost for want of moral clarity and political courage.

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This is an edited version of an address given by Des Moore, Director, Institute for Private Enterprise, at a breakfast given by Robert Clark, Shadow Treasurer, Victoria on July 29, 2005.



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About the Author

Des Moore is Director, Institute for Private Enterprise and a former Deputy Secretary, Treasury. He authored Schooling Victorians, 1992, Institute of Public Affairs as part of the Project Victoria series which contributed to the educational and other reforms instituted by the Kennett Government. The views are his own.

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