It seems that
in the last few months our “high-income economy” is being blamed for a range of
ills: Lack of international competiveness, loss of jobs overseas, factories closing,
the plight of Qantas. The “high-income economy” has replaced “the high
Australian dollar” as the favoured bete noire now that the dollar is not as
high as it used to be.
It seems that
something has to be blamed and I would suggest the focus on people’s wages has
come about because employers feel they will get a more sympathetic reception
from the current Government on this issue. It shouldn’t be the case. In
Opposition Treasurer Joe Hockey made his position quite clear. Speaking to the Committee
for Economic Development of Australia less than a year ago he said expensive
labour “is not a bad thing”.
“Australia’s
standard of living must not go backwards. There is no national benefit in
cutting wages,” Mr Hockey said.
And of course
he is right. While a reduction in the pay of say car workers would be of
temporary benefit to the vehicle manufacturers, the flow-on effect to a host of
other industries, from major retailers to local coffee shops, would be
disastrous. There would be calls for more wage cuts, including a freeze or a
lowering of the minimum wage, and so would begin a sad race to the bottom.
In another part of his address last year Mr Hockey
said he believed Australia could compete effectively against low-income
countries such as China and India providing our productivity was higher. Monash
University academic Rebecca Valenzuela echoes this when she says Australia
needs to invest more effort in this area “making people better trained and
knowledgeable workers, smarter and efficient managers”.
“We also need to invest in good infrastructure, in
the latest technologies, in advanced research and education – all for ensuring
that we can turn products and services that are new, unique and of high quality
to service the growing demands of a more sophisticated consumer,” Dr Valenzuela
says.
Spot on, and I suspect this is also part of Prime
Minister Tony Abbott’s thinking when he announced that Parliament would be
repealing 8000 laws on the statute books as part of a plan to slash red tape and
release $1 billion a year currently taken up in a host of compliance measures.
While I suspect Mr Abbott’s staffers have been
working overtime to dig up a load of obsolete regulations that have never been
repealed because they no longer apply, in order to reach that headline-grabbing
figure of 8000, the concept is encouraging. But it will only work if employers
use any new freedoms to build a more technologically-equipped and productive Australian
economy.
Will keep watching for the repealing of legislation.
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