The much-anticipated jobs summit kicks off on Thursday, with 100 leaders from government, business and unions heading to Canberra for two days of economic dialogue. Their suggestions will be synthesised into a white paper, to be released next year.
But will this white paper be of historic significance? Or will it be a vague, inoffensive, design-by-committee document, to gather dust in a Treasury filing cabinet, reminiscent of something from the ABC’s bureaucratic satire Utopia?
A glass half full?
During the election campaign, Labor referred to the proposed document as its “White Paper on Full Employment” — a clear reference to the Curtin government’s post-war document of the same name. Anthony Albanese explicitly invoked Curtin’s nation-building legacy in his announcement speech.
This 1945 treatise is regarded as one of the most significant economic policy statements in Australian history. It heralded a new era of Australian governments pursuing ultra-low unemployment through more assertive fiscal and monetary policy, after the ravages of the Great Depression.
If Albanese were to pursue something like Curtin’s vision, it would represent a radical but welcome departure from the status quo. Since the economic crises of the 1970s and ’80s, governments across the Western world turned away from pursuing ultra-low unemployment in fear it was fuelling inflation. Government spending has since been relatively restrained, and interest rates reflexively high, to reduce job opportunities and thus consumer demand.
In essence: we stopped workers bidding up the cost of goods by kicking a significant minority of them out of work altogether.
Or half empty?
After the May election, however, Treasury began calling Albanese’s proposed document simply the “Employment White Paper”. Where did the “full” go?
Emma Dawson, executive director of think tank Per Capita, speculated it might have been dropped because some believe Australia has already reached full employment. Indeed, due to a mix of COVID stimulus, post-lockdown consumer spending, and fewer migrants, Australia now has more jobs than jobseekers for the first time since records began.
This is no small feat. This means hundreds of thousands fewer people subjected to joblessness, including long-term unemployment, which can be mentally and physically gruelling. Faced with a smaller pool of applicants, employers are also hiring and training jobseekers without multi-page CVs, and are reluctantly inching up their pay offers.
Some have worried the white paper’s name change might signal Labor backing away from low unemployment, in the face of business owners bemoaning their newfound difficulty in hiring.
This isn’t a crisis — it’s a deliberate feature of full employment. Businesses should have to work hard to recruit, including by raising their salaries and conditions to compete against other firms. As Joe Biden recently quipped, if bosses can’t attract employees with their current offer, “pay them more!”
There may be some genuine, short-term “skills shortages” in our economy — we need more nurses and teachers now, but training them will take three to four years. Solutions will be discussed at the jobs summit, including increasing skilled migration. But recruitment in these professions is made harder by low wages, which low unemployment puts pressure on employers to increase.
Our broken industrial relations system, which ACTU leader Sally McManus will also raise at the summit, slows and frustrates the translation of candidate competition into higher wage offers — for instance, new recruits might be offered more while existing staff are kept on old, substandard agreements. Nonetheless, low unemployment remains an important (though not sufficient) driver of upward wage pressure — just look to New Zealand, whose hot jobs market is starting to turn stagnant wages around.
Towards a glass overflowing
After possible prevarication, Labor appears to have quietly recommitted to keeping unemployment low. The summit’s recently released agenda devotes its first session, and the first chapter of Treasury’s accompanying issues paper, to “maintaining full employment and growing productivity”.
This move should be vocally supported — and the government held to its commitment — lest vested interests dominate the debate. Politicians have been banging on for decades about creating jobs, but when they finally succeeded, few wanted to take credit amid the howling of inconvenienced recruiters.
But it’s worth dwelling on just how significant our achievement is — and why we should fight to keep it.
“The greatest waste in an advanced economy is high unemployment; it is literally wasted human potential on a mass scale,” says David Sligar, a former Treasury economist who now teaches at Macquarie University.
Sligar intimately knows the human cost of job scarcity. “In the early 1990s recession, my family lost its small business, our house, my parent’s marriage — virtually everything we had”, he says. “My single mum was unemployed for most of the remainder of my childhood. With unemployment at 10% or higher for well over two years — 8% or higher for seven years — workers at the bottom didn’t stand a chance.”
“So an unemployment rate of 3.5% is precious, a tremendous achievement that will transform lives. But the benefits won’t all come overnight. With decades of lost ground, Australia needs a sustained period of very low unemployment.”
That’s why, though industrial relations and training must also be discussed at length, maintaining full employment is rightly in the top spot on the summit agenda.
How much of a priority should low unemployment be? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
We also need to bring back manufacturing which the LNP have killed off. The stated reason is that with globalisation manufacturing could done in the cheapest labour countries. Look how that turned out. China managed to somehow hoover up most of the manufacturing the west used to do. I suspect the real reason the LNP worked so hard to kill industry was because big manufacturing plants are relatively easy to unionise and the LNP couldnt handle that. Hence we are dependant on a capricious authoritarian state for our manufactures. Good one LNP you shoft sighted idiots.
China didn’t hoover anything up and it wasn’t just the LNP. The West simply happily did as they always have done, and always will, transfer manufacturing to a low cost country to increase profits. Transferring manufacturing back is a great idea but doubt it will happen. Capital costs, knowledge lost, employment costs will all restrain what gets moved back. We are a minnow with only M25 population and manufacturing here, for most things, is simply uneconomic.
So you are saying Australia is lazy? …………Fair call.
The difference between ‘lazy’ and ‘laid back’ is that the former tend to whine about the results.
The latter, not so much.
It’s a trade-off in lifestyle.
China did hoover everything up, including…well Hoovers. They’re made there now. Australia has over time lost over 1 million jobs to China just in the Textile, Clothing and Footwear industries alone. Now cars have gone. We don’t have a local merchant ship-building industry now. Electrical appliances…gone! We made them in the past from nothing. From nothing. From a nation of war weary, shell-shocked, recently long term unemployed citizenry.
That situation may yet resume when, not IF, current events – political, environmental, social and cultural continue to a confluence.
Wrap your old S/W-M/W tranny in greaseproof, cloth and put it in Faraday cage, inside an old Arnott family selection tin – it’ll be the only useable form of communication if a decent size solar flare takes out the satellites which currently control our lives.
Bringing back manufacturing would be a lot easier if the government would enforce east coast domestic gas reservation and thus make gas and electricity substantially cheaper.
I agree
Damn straight! Libs and Nats hate seeing a large scale unionised workplace. They would offshore food production if they could except that due to the perishable nature of food, this is not feasible. (unlike wool which can remain in a stockpile for 10 years as it did from 1988 till it was finally cleared in 2001). One the free marketeers, read racketeers, realised that you could set up factories in 3rd World countries under favourable environmental and tax conditions, they couldn’t shut down factories here soon enough – those factories they didn’t or couldn’t rationalise here first.
It all boils down to whether Labor restarts mass immigration. If they do, we’ll be back to where we were for the last 15 odd years.
https://uat.crikey.com.au/2022/08/25/immigration-wont-fix-worker-shortage/
Like the sound of this … a Job Guarantee in Australia and how we can make it happen.
https://sustainable-prosperity.net.au/job-guarantee/
With unemployment apparently so low it should be easy to lift everyone above the poverty line. If not, cancel the quarter trill tax breaks to pay for it? Can’t see y not. $248,000,000,000. Giving that to people who already have money coming out of every orofice has to be a moral crime. Labour perpetuating the LNP’s idiotic…. words fail me.
No child HAS to be raised in poverty in Australia. It is a CHOICE of federal government. And it makes me SICK.
It’s often parents who make that ‘choice’ – if such a word applies below the level of cognition/sentience one sees all around.
No adult is forced to gamble, consume junk food or be screen, booze etc addicts but their children have fewer options.
If the ALP uses this summit as a mass immigration reboot the neoliberal emperor within will be well and truly disrobed.
Flat wages, rising unemployment as per the script.
Anyone want to bet against it?
You omitted more expensive housing and rapacious rents.