While the Reserve Bank says over and over that wages growth needs to lift substantially, the government continues to do its best to enable employers to undercut wages growth. This time it’s in Australia’s most exploitive industry after the sex industry: fruit-picking.
Australia’s horticulture industry is now a by-word for exploitation, wage theft, sexual assault and harassment — almost invariably of young foreign workers holidaying here, or temporary migrants here under labour agreements, or the large number of illegal entrants that arrived from countries like Malaysia when Peter Dutton lost control of our borders as Home Affairs minister.
Boris Johnson demanded that Australia dump its requirement that working holidaymakers work for 88 days in the agriculture sector after case after case after case after case of murder, rape, theft and exploitation emerged from the horticulture sector in recent years, often reported in UK and foreign media outlets. The only problem is that it will take five years to phase out. How many backpackers will be murdered, raped, harassed or ripped off between now and 2026?
The phase-out is because the government’s policy of forcing holidaymakers to work in conditions often akin to slavery and exploitation is crucial for the horticulture industry’s business model of cheap, easily exploited labour, preferably with limited capacity to complain.
As a result, the government had its ducks in a row yesterday and announced, simultaneous with the UK free trade deal that ditched the 88-day requirement, a new agriculture visa targeted at ASEAN countries, with the Nationals’ David Littleproud taking the credit.
If UK and European backpackers have the language skills to effectively communicate how they’ve been treated, or might be willing to seek help when they’re abused, people from non-English speaking backgrounds and less developed countries, who are here for economic rather than recreational reasons, will be far easier to exploit. They’re less likely to know to whom to complain, less likely to know their rights, less likely to be able to find out, and more fearful of the consequences of losing their job. The new visa won’t even have the kind of protections that the current visa category targeted at workers from Pacific Island nations have.
Thwarted in its ability to exploit UK holidaymakers, the horticulture industry might come out ahead with a workforce less likely to reveal the abuse and exploitation it subjects its workers to.
All of this is justified by the government and by the industry with the insistence that it can’t “incentivise” Australians to do this work.
“Australians don’t want to do this work,” Littleproud said yesterday. “Young people now want to … work in a pub or be a barista in their school holidays.”
While it’s a worry that Littleproud seems to think bars employ schoolkids, it’s unclear whether the incentives he means include being forced to raid supermarket dumpsters for food, as happened to one underpaid fruitpicker, or being bullied or sexually harassed — the kind of detail to be found in a report released just this week on the colossal extent of exploitation and wage theft in the industry. That report suggests 80% of workers experienced underpayment, with some on as little as $10 a day.
That’s after years of investigations and prosecutions by the Fair Work Ombudsman and umpteen pious pronouncements from industry bodies and the National Farmers Federation about addressing abuse and exploitation. Despite all the evidence of exploitation, much of the media continues to run the industry line about lazy Australians, and fruit going to waste because of labour shortages.
Littleproud was keen to claim yesterday that the new visa would be in place by the end of the year (that is, the industry could continue to exploit UK backpackers while accessing a new pool of exploitable labour). Indeed, a big problem, he insisted, was that the states were not going to let workers in immediately due to COVID restrictions.
But that means the industry will be able to avoid the simple solution that will address labour shortages — increasing wages to a point where they can attract workers. That’s the usual market solution when shortages occur. It’s also what the Reserve Bank has been calling for for years now.
I heard a farmer-spokesman on ABC radio yesterday, complaining about how many job applications he gets from Australians who then don’t show up to interview. One probable cause is that our unemployment benefits system forces the unemployed to apply for jobs which they are unable to perform, with it’s requirement to apply for a quota of vacancies per fortnight.
That’s on top of the people who make a genuine enquiry, and are not interested when they find the pay is abysmal and there is nowhere to stay
Both local Australian and O/S workers are being thrown under the bus to avoid supporting, by regulation or award, compliance
amongst such sectors as agriculture.
However, by conflating with ‘immigrants’ and supposedly ‘work shy’ unemployed etc. ignores the eugenics based philosophy of libertarian economics and hollowing out through regional population decline e.g. smaller farming families and fewer working age.
It would not be rocket science to have a system or public forum of checks, and communicating issues in the sector by those working in it (ex. global backpacker forums); then again like the apartment sector there is no transparent discussion of price, building issues etc. by renters and/or owners as it would upset developers who prefer media…..
e.g. global backpackers forums.
Farmers, growers, hospitality industry are all big abusers and wage thieves and their Coalition came up with a scheme to provide them with expendable cheap foreign labour. In fact Howard, Vail and Downer went even further and like Pig Iron Bob courted the enemy, even worse they fed and bribed the enemy with whom they sent Aussie to die and be tortured and maimed on a cesspit of lies.
It wasn’t always like this as some of us remember.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-07-18/australia-tried-to-convince-its-allies-to-pursue-full-employment/100293040
The price we pay for fruit and veggies in the supermarkets is the start of the exploitation. We don’t pay enough, don’t value fresh produce enough, and so waste too much of it getting from paddock to plate. A government should enforce the minimum age requirements into the supply chain, but we don’t have a government. We have a band of politicians looking after their mates and themselves. Importing cheap labour from OS was not a solution last year, and is, given Covid-19 is still rampaging across Asia and the Pacific, a very risky solution this season.
Yep, this is what pays for Coles’ “down down, prices are down”, and your $1 per litre milk.
It’s $1.20 now and there’s no evidence of the 20c going to dairy farmers. It’s probably going to parasites masquerading as Coles and Woolies executives.
$1! I pay $2.80 a litre..
Spot on. We’ve been paying too little for our fruit and veggies for years, and can remember having just this discussion about fresh food prices around 20 years ago! Nothing has changed unfortunately and it won’t until the industry pays workers a decent wage and makes itself more attractive to work in.
Most of the above comments are misleading because they do not account for the difference between agricultural products whose prices are determined on export markets, including milk, and those that are determined on the domestic market. And how marketing margins are determined. The fuss over $1 milk in supermarkets was always confused. $1 (fresh) milk was a good offer for dairy farmers otherwise producing for the export market for manufactured dairy products. That the extra 20 cents finishes up in the hands of the supermarkets should be no surprise.
Perhaps an additional requirement should be all guest workers are automatically joined up to the relevant union. Not something the Coalition would ever do, more likely make a condition of their visa that they don’t join a union or even talk to a union rep. But a Labor party, which should be thinking very hard about increasing union membership if it wants to increase wages, should have that policy in its back pocket. Though expect Nat protests that the price of fruit will reach $100 a kilo if that happens. And a Newscorp pile-on about communism on the back of it.
The AWU has endeavoured to look after the interests of O/S workers but you are not likely to read about it in media, except ABC; otherwise unions may become less scary…..
Honestly, this sort of thing is going to be the wedge for other industries. Once farmers can get cheap labour, other industries will similarly cry poor and work to get in on the exploitation racket.
I think some of them already are. Isn’t that was Howard introduced the 485 visa for?
Curious, did you mean the 457 visa? And if so, yeah, that seemed to be in effect (if not intent) about getting cheap labour in.
Someone recently mentioned the 482 (not 485) visa as well. It is for temporary labour brought in under a labour agreement (just googled it!). So farm workers could be in this class.
The 457 was brought in by Howard to undercut local wages and undermine the unions. Prior to that, workers had to be skilled and to complement/ enhance the skills of the local labour force
The corruption of the immigration program began with Howard really.
Most corruption in this country began with Howard.
And the lies.
A bit hazy now but was it something about core and non core promises?
Most of the corruption in today’s politics started with Howard and Costello and continues bigger and better under first Abbott and now Morrison and will get even worse if the coalition is re-lected next time.
It’s rampant through all the trades and many professions now. IT is bad, many brought in by labour hire companies and then farmed out (ha) to projects at double and more the pay rate, squeezing out local kids who have graduated with IT skills. The industry cries out that we have no local kids doing IT, but the unis are pumping out quality graduates who can’t get that first leg up. It’s the usual case of Australian companies using visas to avoid actually training up residents.
Repeat across a vast range of industries. You can’t walk through a finance dept without running into 3 UK backpackers as well as other nationalities. I favour the immigration visa system, particularly for genuine skill shortages, but only if companies can demonstrate a commitment to training up locally credentialed kids first.
Same happened for trades, particularly boiler makers, lots of mining trades and professions. They abandoned the apprenticeship model and then complained they couldn’t source any locals.
I remember reading a number of years ago how outsourcing in the 90s effectively killed programming as a profession in the UK. It was cheaper to hire people from Asia, with the knock-on effect that there was a lack of senior developers riding through the ranks. And if a firm tried to train and promote in-house, they were rewarded with having those employees poached by bigger firms. Meanwhile the unemployment rate for CS grads was something like 25%.
I don’t think the problem is quite that bad here, though maybe I’ve been lucky. I do see that the industry is filled with companies trying to make an easy buck by putting themselves between the developer and workplace, and that credentialism is taken as competence, and the visa can exacerbate both problems. But on the flipside, most of the people who I’ve worked with who have come on such visas are good hard-working developers, so, yeah…
What you suggest is how it used to be pre-Howard and it seemed to work well
A business which cannot pay award wages and turn a profit is obviously marginal in economic terms and should close!