The Opposition Leader Bill Shorten formally kicked off his political year at the National Press Club (NPC) yesterday; PM Malcolm Turnbull will do so today in a lunchtime address, each trying to set the agenda in a political time when controlling the political debate has never been tougher.
The stakes are far higher for Malcolm Turnbull, who is badly listing in the polls and considered even by his own side to lack direction; his replacement — be it Tony Abbott or Peter Dutton — is openly speculated on. He needs a strong performance today and to carry it over into Parliament next week to show he’s still got something to offer.
Bill Shorten, however, can coast along. He knows Turnbull is never more than five minutes from stumbling. And, to his credit, he took the risk of taking bold policies to the electorate last year and discovered that, in the absence of Tony Abbott, the Liberals lacked any ability to effectively run a scare campaign. Turnbull’s mooted scare campaign against renewable energy — the basis of his NPC speech according to preview reports — won’t exactly fill Labor with dread.
That’s perhaps the reason why yesterday’s effort from Shorten had a decided sense of complacency about it. True, he dwelt at length on the failures of the political class and the alienation from politics-as-usual, but his prescriptions — supporting the government on entitlements reform, some changes on political donations (hilarious given Shorten’s own performance on donations), gentler politics, town hall meetings where he will look for answers not questions — had the air of the a post-lunch whiteboard session. At least he’s committed to a Senate inquiry into a federal anti-corruption body. That should have the crooks and shonks trembling in fear.
[Fear and protectionism the sad ambitions of a hapless government]
But Shorten’s real priority was jobs (or as he put it, “jobs, jobs and jobs”) for Australians via vocational education and curbing the use of foreign workers. Most of his argument could summed up in one paragraph:
“Exploitation drives down wages, undermines safety – and corrodes our national skills base. Last year, the Immigration Minister issued over 10,400 visas for trade and technician jobs. Yet apprenticeships in these exact sectors are in decline. It is too easy to import skills — rather than train our own people.”
How unsubtle is that? The glib linking of “exploitation” and 457 visas, and the ready answer of more training. The Coalition, he argued, had drastically cut funding to trades training (he skipped over the Labor-inspired debacle of private sector education provision) and we need to avoid becoming “an unskilled enclave in a modernising Asia”. He didn’t commit to additional funding for vocational education but he would conduct a “National Skills Summit”. And there’d be yet another requirement imposed on defence procurement: “one in every 10 jobs, on every single priority project, should go to an Australian apprentice”.
Well I guess that rules out anything being built overseas ever again.
There’s nothing new in this, beyond a summit or two. Indeed, in his focus on trades, Shorten echoes a speech by Julia Gillard in 2011 in which she lauded hard work, Australians who “set the alarm early” and engage in manual labour, and turned her “jaundiced eye” on “socialites”. Shorten is similarly interested in “rewarding Australians who work hard, repaying Australians who play by the rules, who do the right thing — who pay their taxes here”.
The pitch undoubtedly has much more bite in 2017 than 2011, designed as it is to tap into the disaffected electorate that believes it is doing the right thing when others — variously, brown-skinned people, politicians, multinational corporations, foreigners in general — are not doing the right thing, and getting away with it. But Gillard’s fetishisation of manual labour made little sense then, and Shorten’s makes even less now, given the continued growth of the services sector of the Australian economy in the intervening years. That’s reflected in the data on 457 visas — it’s services categories (software engineers, professional services, hospitality) where Australia has been calling on foreign labour, not trades. And while Shorten gave a nod to the growth of health and social services as an employer, that’s one sector where there’s been a noticeable fall in the use of 457 visas, despite the relentless growth in employment in that sector.
[Despite scandals, 457s help a changing economy]
This is one issue where, for all his nonsense, Malcolm Turnbull had the right instincts, initially looking to a modern innovative economy that embraced our transition to services as a key source of growth, and sought to use it as a platform for exports. It stood, and stands, in dire contrast to Labor’s continued obsession with manufacturing, driven by the strong role manufacturing unions play within the party, and a more general culture — the Greens have it, too — of regarding services jobs as somehow less real than manufacturing, construction and other male-dominated sectors.
Turnbull, of course, has been forced to recant any positive, optimistic economic policy in favour of peddling fear and pandering to the reactionary sentiment within the electorate, and even half-heartedly followed Labor in cracking down on 457 visas. The Australian Financial Review‘s Michael Smith made the excellent point yesterday that now is exactly the wrong time to be targeting foreign workers, given Donald Trump’s Muslim ban is likely to deter many non-white people with IT skills — whether Muslim or not — from moving to the United States, presenting countries like Australia with a massive opportunity to tap into a global pool of skills and talent.
But that sort of thinking appears to be heretical at the moment. Especially in a Labor party that struggles to see employment outside a quaint 1970s narrative of tradies and manufacturing.
BK, trades deliver vital services to businesses and their employees. Repair services, broadband connections, haircuts, lunches, etc.
I’ll admit Shorten’s focus is skewed to the construction and manufacturing end,
but people in these trades are particularly vulnerable right now, these occupations are also highly visible and popular with the electorate. Services jobs growth is struggling to replace declines in other sectors.
It was also good to see the youth getting a look-in for once with the 1 in 10 apprenticeships requirement. You’ve zeroed in on defence procurement, but the vast bulk of these apprenticeships will be in infrastructure construction, stuff you can’t build overseas.
Turnbull’s recognition of our economic transition is commendable, but it doesn’t just do it on its own, there has to be investment by the government to deliver the sort of business environment we need and of course nobody is buying the scattergun lower taxes strategy. Private sector investment hasn’t filled the void left by the mining boom. Labor or Liberal, someone at some point is gonna have to throw some money on the table.
Turnbull is left in the unenviable position of talking up the Government’s role in aiding the transition of the economy, while leading a party commited to lessening the Government’s involvement in the economy.
Of course many argue that is always best for the Government to “get out of the way” and allow the market to sort everything out. However the market still demands the protections (ie legal status, property protections, access to legal system) and societal subsidies (ie infrastructure, educated workforce) provided by the government, just with none of the pesky “regulations” (ie protections for customers, employees and the environment, payment of reasonable taxation) that has always been the other side of this bargain.
Shorten may be unsubtle and populist with his arguments about exploitation of workers and non-payment of tax, but it does pick up on legitimate concerns of many that a large and important segment of society is no longer pulling its weight.
I think this is a very good comment, BU. Charging Shorten with offering ‘false’ promise of protection to the masses ignores this government’s responsibility for that message resonating. It’s only false if there’s a genuine promise on offer for a true alternative, i.e. a free trade-driven economic renaissance. But there isn’t. It’s Shorten’s however-thin offer, or the company-tax-cuts-only Turnbull/Morrison offer, the add-a-culture-war-to-that Abbott/Dutton upgrade, or the double-down-on-both-with-some-state-backed-bigotry-thrown-in-too of the Bernardi/Hanson wingnuts.
Keane, as usual, is just preaching to the choir of Keating’s children among the commentariat and Canberra-obsessed. (I grant it’s an entirely valid career move for someone belonging to the endangered media species.) His free trade agenda is though an utterly abstract, ideal-typical fantasy of theoretical pure reason in Australia today (and the wider world, of course). The real world political choice is between a market rigged in favour of the rich only, or a market rigged in favour of the rich plus some proportion of the middle class as well. (Let’s face it: Shorten’s no socialist protecting anyone!)
No, no, no. The free market model is perfect.
The problem is that reality doesn’t conform to the model.
No, you’re right Duncan. All those millions upon millions of people who voted for Brexit, Trump , Orban, etc, were simply nothing more than racists it turns out. Yes, thank heavens to Bernard, that’s all cleared up for us now (I admit, it was looking like capitalism was a problem for a bit there, but fortunately it turned out to be just a fit of pig ignorance after all). Capitalism’s fine and good. Just needs a tad less regulations, a touch more free trade, plus a puff of fairy-dust faith in capitalists to not systematically fuck us, and it’ll all be spiffidee-boo. Poof!
It seems like a rational take-down of Shorten’s position, but it has more holes in it than Shorten’s policy.
So 457’s are being used in IT, professional services (?) and hospitality. And yet there are huge numbers of Australians, particularly over 35’s, with IT skills and degrees that can’t find work, and much evidence that outsourcing IT to 457 visa holders is an excellent way to pay under-award wages. Where else do we see that? Oh yes, hospitality, where there is ample evidence of small business using 457 visa holders as they are more likely to accept under award and cash pays without tax, super, workers’ comp etc. There is huge evidence that this is rampant, why aren’t you seeing the connection Bernard.
Professional Services? I’m guessing a lot of accountants and lawyers, as we are only over-producing tens of thousands of graduates in those fields and yet still, every time I turn around my employer has found another non-resident for an accountant job. WTF! What do resident Australians with these degrees go into?
So mostly the 457’s scheme is being used to avoid paying award wages, not to provide labour that can’t be found in the local economy.
And trades – for crying out loud, they mostly work in construction or maintenance of buildings, not building subs. I would recommend any young person to get into trades, they are the least likely jobs to be taken over by automation. Long after the accountants and lawyers have all been made redundant, the sparkie and plumber will be knocking back work.
And all those visa for hospitality, mostly unskilled or lightly skilled, and yet we have huge youth unemployment. The clearer analysis would suggest that our youth are being sold out of entry level jobs and experience to satisfy underpaying employers.
Think outside the obvious Bernard. The areas of 457 visa issuance pretty closely align with areas where we have an excess of labour.
And no mention of nursing, 475 visa a must to get a job, proficiency in language, written and oral definitely NOT required. Student visas for dumbed down university degrees lying cheating to get degree and NO proficiency in English appears to be a prerequisite, get all your patient studies off the internet.etc.etc. The errors and cover ups that have been let loose on unsuspecting public is genuinely appalling. Going to hospital or a nursing home take your own RN!
Most positions apparently advertised as i st year graduate positions (lower pay)if you want the job the do it for the lesser pay. Hell, I could get a bit wound up on this topic.
I watched Shorten’s effort yesterday & managed to tolerate a mere ten minutes of Turnbull today. The latter sounded hollow & unconvincing. He claimed Australia’s finest years are still ahead & that this is the country of the Fair Go. Obviously Malcolm doesn’t get out & about enough if he’s under those misapprehensions. Oops, I forgot that Manus Island & Nauru aren’t linked with Australia so their finest years aren’t ahead & they won’t be given a Fair Go.
Turnbull lost his loquacious skills when asked about future personal tax cuts not being possible in the budget if the next financial quarter places us in in technical recession. He started, stopped, fumbled, searching for words, unable to construct a cogent sentence…that’s the point where it became too embarrassing so I switched off. As, I suspect, Australia already has.
Bernard, make your point, as weak as it is, but don’t continually equate disquiet over 457s as racist. Step out of your inner Melbourne journo bubble and … talk to the people who make your coffee or serve you your food. You won’t even have to leave Melbs to find lots of people being ripped off because they’re on foreign work visas, be they 457s, working holiday or whatever. Go to a backpackers and ask around – it’s pretty much accepted amongst them that they’ll get ripped off and treated like shit.
While a focus on 457s *may* appeal to racists that doesn’t mean that most people who are concerned about them are racist.
So, yeah, make your point, but drop the intellectually lazy equation of anti-457s with racism. It’s a bore.