Despite the lamentations of neoliberal commentators and businesses, and their media supporters, about the lack of industrial relations reform in Australia since WorkChoices, they have little to complain about. Australian workers have endured years of wage stagnation and, in many industries, real wages cuts.
Industrial disputation has virtually vanished. Unions have continued to shrink. Company profits have soared. For industrial relations reform failure, it looks an awful lot like success.
Part of that success lies in how the issues are framed in public debate. The framing we’ve had for a long time is that trade unions are reflexively evil and an economic threat, as are rising wages; that industrial disputation is a relic of the dark ages; that the only relevant context for industrial relations is the impact on business bottom lines.
To see how such framing is constructed in the media, have a look at an analysis piece by one of Australia’s most senior and respected journalists, the ABC’s David Speers, on the weekend.
The tenor of Speers’ piece was that Labor had made an error by proposing to address precarity of work and low wages growth, opening itself up to a scare campaign by the government — one based on Christian “Public Bar” Porter’s claim that it would cost $20 billion.
Speers’ both-sides centrism and focus on political tactics rather than policy is par for the course from the press gallery, but it’s the framing that is of interest.
Speers admitted that Porter’s claim — which was entirely fictional — was “over-the-top” but “it is legitimate to consider what this policy might ultimately cost business, particularly small firms struggling to recover from a recession”.
Right there is the framing in action: that any protection for workers must be assessed in terms of what they cost business.
That’s even the case when businesses have been rolling back protections, stealing wages and curbing wages growth with impunity for years.
If it’s “legitimate” to consider the cost on business, Speers failed to address an equally legitimate consideration: what the cost to workers has been of the shift in industrial relations power over the last two decades, and in particular of the government’s deliberate strategy of wage stagnation since 2013.
In recent years Australia’s total wages bill — reflecting both wages growth and employment growth — has risen to half a trillion dollars and kept going. In the year to September 2020 it was around $580 billion.
But without wage stagnation, it would have grown significantly more. If Australian workers had averaged 3% annual wages growth since 2014 rather than the lousy 2% they got, workers would have received around $51 billion more from employers in the years since then. Even not counting the pandemic year of 2020 means $33.5 billion went not to workers but to company profits, to shareholders, to executive bonuses.
It’s a crude calculation, but 3% wages growth is hardly ambitious. The Wage Price Index grew at 3.4% a year while Julia Gillard was prime minister.
If Speers and other journalists want to repeat Christian Porter’s $20 billion claim — even acknowledging it’s “over the top” — then they should be pointing out Australian workers have been dudded of $50 billion since the Coalition came to power as well. It’s no more “over the top”. And that’s the starting line for any industrial relations debate.
Fifty billion that could have gone to the lowest income workers who have suffered disproportionately from wage stagnation in recent years — the labourers, machine operators, hospitality and retail workers who have gone backwards in real terms, and who would have spent a far greater proportion of it than the shareholders and company executives who pocketed it instead.
Australia is approaching a second decade of wage stagnation and no one in the government or business, and few in the mainstream media, are talking about how to address it, beyond the readily debunked drivel that company tax cuts will, by some process of magical financial osmosis, flow through to wage rises.
Labor’s proposals aren’t likely to shift the dial much either. But the mere mention of any idea of lifting wages growth reflexively prompts talk of $20 billion imposts on business, faithfully repeated by journalists.
See how the framing works?
Us old ABC watchers knew that Aunty was on the skids even before Speers was invited in – they had already thrown in the towel!
Yep. Speers and Sales are not fit to sit in the same chairs as Cassidy and O’Brien. The Drum is dishwater. Four Corners is the only one left standing.
Media Watch is my never missed program.
Was it effective even when Littlemore had the chair. Whatever breaches of ethical standards were identified were repeated, with impunity, the following week.
At least I became more aware of the nastiness etc of commercial TV. Also gave me total disgust for commercial TV. As a senior I am seriously out of step with “popular” tv shows.
In all seriousness, I would include that last sentence in your CV.
It did tend to inform anyone who cared if the transgressions were repeated.
Though the last episode was a yawn.
You obviously missed the last 4corners!
Exactly. If Russian influence on Australian polity deserves a program, then surely balance requires a dozen or more programs on US influence.
Agree.
4C when they platformed white nationalist Steve Bannon the other year?
John Brennan. The ABC has not thrown in the towel. They are in survival mode and do their best with very difficult and hostile political regime. Regards
David spears was, and in my opinion, still is, totally in tune with the Murdoch message, the ABC is now just a punch drunk fighter that occasionally lands a blow but is virtually out on its feet.
Speers on Sunday, Sales on Monday – both really underlined your point. The ABC is falling apart before my eyes.
I’m always curious how they come up with those figures, not least because a wage rise would filter back into businesses through increased spending power. A lot of the figures just seem so obviously made up that it’s hard to believe they are given any plausibility whatsoever by the journalists covering them.
True, K – improved wages increases aggregate demand.
I am afraid that, collectively, the aveage Australian worker/voter is like the frog in the pot of cold water that will gradually heated to boiling pont.They have swallowed the line that unions are bad and by association, so is Labor.Consequently, greedy employers and conservative governments can now put the slipper in with increased impunity and the fact that 40% of workers will be relying on tips or a second job if they can find one.The 51st state of the U.S.of A., here we come.
And who worked every day and were abused because of “lockdowns”? who worked when sick because they did not have sickleave? who delivered (nationally) our food and enabled us to still buy it?