Monday 25th of November 2024

crime scene .....

the scene of the crime .....

There has been a revolution in Australian economy over the last three decades that has seen millions of people move into insecure jobs without any prospect of permanent employment, the ACTU Congress in Sydney has been told.

Former deputy prime minister Brian Howe, in his keynote address this morning to around 1000 ACTU delegates gathered at the Sydney Convention Centre, said the internationalisation of the Australian economy had no doubt improved living standards.

"But it has also given rise to unprecedented growth of insecure work," he said, with 40 per cent of workers now not permanently employed -- but instead in some form of casual, temporary or contract employment.

Mr Howe has headed a six-month inquiry, set up by the ACTU, to look at the growth in non-permanent employment in Australia since the 1980s.

The ACTU says that these workers have: 

  • no regular pay
  • no paid holidays
  • no paid sick leave
  • no job security

The inquiry held hearings across 22 Australian towns and cities, and received more than 500 submissions from affected individuals and groups.

The ACTU's report, released this morning, recommends that casual work be allowed only for ''irregular, intermittent or very short-term work''.

And, under the plan, the creation of jobs deemed temporary would be outlawed "where there are reasonable grounds to expect that the work will be ongoing".

The national workplace umpire, Fair Work Australia, would also be given the power to make "secure employment orders" forcing employers to convert casual workers to permanent.

Employer groups have said this week that most of these ideas were too radical, and would dangerously shift the balance of power from employers to employees.

The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry warned earlier this week that, while the report identified some worthy issues that industry needed to discuss with unions, business would resist most of these proposed "solutions".

But Mr Howe said the problem was bigger than employers were admitting.

"The evidence we heard confirms the view that there are a very large number of people engaged in insecure work who want more stable conditions, but find themselves trapped on the periphery," he told the ACTU Congress.

Mr Howe said that the Labor budget released last week had attacked unemployed people, rather than coming up with a way of tackling the growing problem of insecure work.

"The derisory way this was addressed in the last budget was regrettable," Mr Howe said.

"All this emphasis on punishing the unemployed has really proved counter-productive," he said.

Unions needed to speak out more strongly about the most vulnerable being attacked in this way, he said.

"We are not going to wear this situation where unemployed people are treated as pariahs. That is absurd, and no sophisticated country should do that," he said.

There was a growing crisis nationally that saw too many working people trapped in jobs that left them not knowing "what hours they will work from week to week".

He said this left too many people unable to get home loans or make long-term plans that would lift them up over time.

"This is not a matter of turning the clock back -- the clock has moved on," he said.

He said a new focus on improving skills in the workforce would help many lift themselves out of insecure positions.

"Without very serious investment in marginal workers, nothing much is going to change," Mr Howe said.

But Senator Eric Abetz, the opposition's spokesman on workplace relations, said the ACTU report was "intellectually insulting", paid for by unions, and played into the hands of senior union leaders and Labor.

"Once again, the union bosses know better what individual workers want than those individual workers," Mr Abetz said.

"This report has been paid for by the ACTU and conducted by a former Labor Deputy Prime Minister. It comes as no surprise that it magically plays right into the union bosses' current campaign or that it was released in the middle of the ACTU National Congress," he said.

"This is an intellectually insulting report which suggests that employees cannot make decisions for themselves about their work-life balance. If employees want to work on a part-time, casual basis, or as a contractor they should be allowed to do just that.

"When the union bosses see casual employees and independent contractors, they see a large pool of untapped union dues," Mr Abetz said.

Howe Warns Of Dangers Of Casual Revolution

 

by the numbers .....

by the numbers .....

 

Casual workers at a warehouse in Melbourne's west are being required to wear - and pay for - armbands identifying them as non-permanent staff.

The armbands contain employee numbers on barcodes and must be used to obtain scanning equipment needed for their work. Permanent workers at the Sunshine warehouse do not have to wear the armbands.

The case has come to light as unions raise concerns over the increased casualisation of labour. Five per cent of Australia's workforce, or about 605,000 people, are now employed by labour hire firms, according to the Bureau of Statistics.

Labour-hire casual workers are concentrated in warehousing, manufacturing, property and business services, and health and community services.

About 15 workers at the Sunshine warehouse must have the barcoded armbands.

The workers are employed by labour hire company Manpower and the warehouse is run by logistics firm DB Schenker to ship equipment for Fuji Xerox.

While the armbands do not need to be worn at all times, the casuals must scan themselves in before starting work and carry the armbands at all times. They also have to pay for the bands.

An official with the National Union of Workers, which discovered the Sunshine armband case, said all employees should be treated with dignity, and questioned whether there was enough regulation of labour hire firms.

''The unregulated use of agency casual labour is creating an underclass that threatens our way of life,'' said the union's assistant national secretary, Paul Richardson. ''Every worker should have the right to a job they can count on and be treated with dignity at work.''

The general manager of Manpower Australia and New Zealand, Chris Riley, said the wearing of armbands was sought by the warehouse operator. ''Many of our clients require people that we place on site to wear ID badges,'' he said.

He said it was Manpower's responsibility to ensure its workers were ''not worse off in any way ... We have to ensure that the work practices are appropriate for our people. But in terms of how they are identified, [that] is really another thing''.

The Recruitment and Consulting Services Association, which has many labour hire firms among its members, recently put out a report on benefits of the agencies to manage skills shortages. ''For the majority of employers, it's not a choice of 'hire permanent staff or hire temporary staff'. It is in fact 'hire temporary staff or don't hire at all','' the report said.

The ACTU has run a campaign on what it says are the growing effects of job insecurity. It has singled out the practices of labour hire firms as an issue.

Unions say insecure jobs - those providing little economic security for workers and little control over their working lives - now account for almost 40 per cent of the workforce.

But critics say the ACTU is exaggerating. John Lloyd, former head of the construction watchdog and now at the Institute of Public Affairs, said the 40 per cent figure did ''not stand up to a lot scrutiny''.

Many business operators - about 9 per cent of the workforce - were very happy to work for themselves. ''The ACTU calls them anxious workers,'' Mr Lloyd said. ''Most business operators are quite happy with what they are doing, using their own skills to create their own wealth and independence and very few of them would be running around being anxious.''

He said the same applied for many independent contractors, who also make up about 9 per cent of the workforce.

Casual Workers Forced To Wear Barcodes

Of course, the requirement for casual employees to wear armbands containing an identifying barcode is no different to the everyday requirement for millions of workers to wear/carry workplace security/access/identification cards, that has been around for years.

The real discrimination lies in the fact that these 'employees' are being required to pay for their armbands although, ironically, in the blind pursuit of workplace productivity/efficiency 'at any price', dumb employers who 'victimise' their people in this fashion will inevitably miss-out on far bigger performance gains that accrue from having a loyal & motivated workforce.

I wonder if the Managing Directors of DB Schenker or Fuji Xerox have to pay for their 'armbands' or, indeed, if they are even required to have one? 

the new amerikan normal .....

This week, David Segal at the New York Times broke the news to America that not only was Apple - the computer and gadget manufacturer formerly seen as a symbol of good old American ingenuity - making its profits on the backs of abused factory workers in China, but also on poorly paid store employees here in the US.

Apple store workers, he wrote, make up a large majority of Apple's US workforce -30,000 out of 43,000 employees in this country - and they make about $25,000 a year, or about $12 an hour.

Lawrence Mishel at the Economic Policy Institute notes that that's just a dollar above the federal poverty level. This for a company that paid nine of its top executives a total of $441 million in 2011.

“The discrepancy between Apple’s profits/executive pay and its compensation to its workers is a particularly glaring example of what is occurring in the wider economy,” Mishel writes.

And he's right. Also this week, Henry Blodget at Business Insider posted three charts that show just how out of whack our economic system really is. Corporate profits are now at an all-time high, while wages as a percent of the economy are at an all-time low, and fewer Americans are employed than at any time in the previous three decades.

Companies like Apple are squeezing their workers, leaving them to live on less, while lavishing pay and benefits on their executives. The death of lionized Apple chief Steve Jobs seems to have opened a floodgate of reporting and criticism of the company's labor practices, but all this really proves is that Jobs and his empire are no better than, and no different from the rest of the US business elite. Just like everyone else, they're taking their profits directly out of workers' pockets.

“One reason companies are so profitable is that they're paying employees less than they ever have as a share of GDP. And that, in turn, is one reason the economy is so weak: Those 'wages' are other companies' revenue,” Blodget points out. And high unemployment makes workers willing to accept those poverty wages. When you're desperate for a job, any job is better than nothing.

Right-wingers from Michele Bachmann to Ron Paul have used high unemployment as an opportunity to call for eliminating the minimum wage entirely, letting companies decide just how little they think their workers are worth. Companies love to claim that if they're forced to pay more, they'll have to eliminate jobs, but these numbers show that actually, they're able to keep wages low and refuse to hire; available cheap labor supposedly leads to more job creation, but it's the hollow, gnawing fear created by ongoing high unemployment that keeps wages low and workers passive. And the rich are getting ever richer.

The “recession” is over - officially it ended in 2009, but for most people the pain was just beginning. Real incomes have continued to fall, governments continue to slash budgets while corporate profits just keep going up. This is the new normal.

And it's only going to get worse.

The rhetoric of austerity, sounded loudest from Republicans but often echoed by far too many Democrats, is a language of belt-tightening, of shared sacrifice, of somber speeches by pompous politicians who proclaim that they feel your pain while announcing budget cuts that freeze salaries, lay off workers and force more work onto those who remain. And CEOs use that same language when sorrowfully explaining why they simply can't create jobs. Morgan Stanley's CEO, James Gorman, beset by New Yorkers at his bank's shareholder meeting, blamed the lousy economy when asked why he hadn't created the jobs his company had promised the city in exchange for massive tax breaks.

Because that's what rich corporations are able to buy with their record profits; politicians who turn around and hand them even more money, often in the form of tax breaks that hollow out city and state budgets and force even more austerity, even more social service cuts that fall on the backs of the same underpaid workers. (Remember FreshDirect, handed $129 million in tax subsidies to create $8-an-hour jobs?)

Corporate taxes, too - at least the ones corporations actually pay - are at a 40-year low, with an effective tax rate paid of 12.1 percent. They've fallen from about 6 percent of GDP to less than 2 percent, according to ThinkProgress's Pat Garofalo. Once again, that's what you can buy when you'd rather pay politicians than your workers.

Chris Hayes, in his new book Twilight of the Elites, notes that the ultra-wealthy have spawned a whole “income defense” industry dedicated to preserving their wealth and power, an industry that works tirelessly to push policies that favor the rich. He writes:

Over the last decade, the political arm of the income defense industry has been wildly successful. The tax cuts passed by Bush and extended by Obama represent a total of $81.5 billion transferred from the state into the hands of the richest 1 percent. Meanwhile, hedge fund managers and their surrogates have deployed millions of dollars to lobbyists to maintain the so-called carried interest loophole, a provision of tax law that allows fund managers to classify much of their income drawn from investing gains as “carried interest” so that it is taxed at the low capital gains rate of 15 percent, rather than the marginal income rate, which would in most cases be more than twice that. It was this wrinkle in the law that helped Mitt Romney, a man worth an estimated quarter of a billion dollars, pay an effective tax rate of just under 14 percent in 2010. In 2008, 2009, and 2010, the House of Representatives passed a bill closing the loophole, only to see it beaten back by an intense wave of lobbying in the Senate.

With Citizens United, the Supreme Court gave the ultra-rich yet another weapon in the class war, another tool by which to control our politics. MIT economist Daren Acemoglu told ThinkProgress, “We already had a very serious problem. Instead of trying to stem that tide [of money in politics], we’ve done the opposite and we’ve now opened the sluice gate and said you can use that money with no restrictions whatsoever.”

It's bad enough when the rich use their money to buy themselves tax breaks that help them get even richer. But millionaires and billionaires from Bill Gates to Betsy DeVos to Mark Zuckerberg are also putting money into pet political ideas; on education, for example, where their money buys them outsized influence over policy. Politics has become a playground for the ultra-rich, where they get to test their pet theories on the rest of us and we're expected to smile and thank them for their charity.

It's not just tax breaks and subsidies that have created massive inequality - it's also full-on war on the only means of organized power that working people ever had: unions. Private-sector union density hovers around 7 percent right now, after years of concerted attacks, and for the last couple of years public sector unions have been in the 1 percent's crosshairs.

From the Supreme Court, where Samuel Alito wrote a majority decision attacking unions' ability to collect money from workers they represent for political activity, to the reelection of Scott Walker in Wisconsin, public-sector unions are under pressure. Politicians keep slashing public-sector jobs, keeping unemployment high and tax revenues low, and stalling the recovery, but they're also part of the attack on the one part of the economy that still has a strong union culture.

As unions declined, so have wages for most people. The Center for American Progress found in a study that as union membership decreases, so does the so-called middle class's share of national income. The middle class long served as a buffer between those at the top and those at the bottom. As long as the majority of Americans were comfortable, had decent jobs and pensions, and could send their kids to school, the wealthy could stay wealthy and the poor were pretty much just ignored. And that middle class was built through decades of union agitation, not just for higher wages and healthcare benefits, but for the eight-hour day, for the weekend, for safety in the workplace and some job security.

But now the middle class has been hollowed out. Increasingly, there are the super-super-rich, and there are the rest of us.

As Hayes writes, we're ruled by an ever-smaller group of elites who not only control all the resources, but all the power. The same people who are pushing wages downward are the ones paying for politicians' campaigns, and they're the same people on the boards of directors and trustees of our universities, our institutions - like JP Morgan Chase's Jamie Dimon, who serves on the Board of Directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, the Harvard Business School, Catalyst, as well as on the Board of Trustees of New York University School of Medicine.

Meanwhile, for the vast majority of us, the recession that supposedly ended in 2009 looks more like a depression each day, and as long as low wages and high unemployment remain the order of the day, there's no recovery in sight. 

Corporate Profits At All-Time High; Wages At All-Time Low: Can We Call It Class War Yet?