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You have to wonder whether Iain Ross and his Fair Work Commission colleagues have actually read anything the Reserve Bank has said recently about the Australian economy and why household income growth has been so low in recent years.
Yesterday, the commission decided to give the 20+% of Australian workers on minimum wage a 3% wage increase. That sounds good given the inflation rate in the March quarter was just 1.3% — and unlikely to reach 2% this year, or maybe even next. But it’s less than the 3.5% the Commission gave minimum wage workers last year. And it it will do nothing to lift the currently official level of wages growth, which has been stuck at 2.3% for several quarters, courtesy of the government’s policy of wage stagnation.
Why only three per cent? Here’s the decision:
“We have decided to award a lower increase this year than that awarded last year having regard to the changes in the economic environment (in particular the recent fall in GDP growth and the drop in inflation) and the tax-transfer changes which have taken effect in the current Review period and which have provided a benefit to low-paid households. We are satisfied that the level of increase we have decided upon will not lead to any adverse inflationary outcome and nor will it have any measurable negative impact on employment.”
The problem is, the primary change in the economic environment over the last twelve months has been low household income growth — at least according to RBA governor Philip Lowe, who recently observed:
[T]he main reason for the shift in momentum in the Australian economy is a slowdown in household consumption growth. Over the second half of 2018, household consumption increased by just .75%, which is an unusually soft outcome.
So the reaction of the FWC to the problem of lower household consumption is to… lower household consumption, by ordering a lower increase in the minimum wage than the previous year. What restrained the FWC from at least handing out a 3.5% increase again this year, or even higher? The only clue is that the 3% increase “will not lead to any adverse inflationary outcome and nor will it have any measurable negative impact on employment”.
So let’s talk about inflation for a moment given Ross mentioned it. Did last year’s 3.5% minimum wage rise have any impact on inflation? Absolutely zero. Inflation has actually fallen in the wake of the 3.5% increase, from 2.1% to 1.3%. The 3.5% didn’t touch the sides! And what about that “measurable negative impact on employment”? On that, at least, employers would agree with them, because the usual suspects like James Pearson of ACCI attacked 3% as putting jobs in danger, let alone anything higher (then again, anything but a major wage cut would have Pearson et al warning economic apocalypse is nigh).
Only problem is, the link between increasing the minimum wage and higher unemployment is a complete furphy busily being disproved every day in the United States, where states are significantly increasing minimum wages and not merely not seeing any negative employment effects, but seeing employment increases that have made their neighbours decide to lift wages as well.
In the RBA’s recent Statement of Monetary Policy, the bank made this observation:
Uncertainty about expected household income growth continues to be important for the outlook for consumption. Should households conclude that low income growth will be more persistent than previously expected, households may adjust their spending by more than currently projected and consumption growth could remain weak for a longer period.
Ross and Co have done their little bit to ensure that dismal scenario comes true.
Terrific, targeted analysis BK. Totes loving this elegant run of bullshit detectorish dot-connecting.
These guys have got to get down off their big lever econ-platforms and sift through the mud blood and sh*t of what’s actually going on at the earn & spend (er, not spend) serf end of the economy. Which expandeth apace (huge chunks of middle-class information labour are now gig piecework too, of course: it only still feels posh and salaried cos of the suits ‘n ties).
Three percent – higher than inflation! – sounds better than 66 cents an hour, huh. If you’re working ‘at least fifteen hours a week’ that’s…hey, one cigarette a day, one happy meal a week, half a tank of petrol a month. Woot woot.
If it’s tenaciously stalled consumer spending that vexes you, then – like ‘unemployment rate’ – the (risible) minimum wage, in a profoundly disconnected, atomised and increasingly black gig labour market is a metric of relevance only to the economic illiterate.
56 cents/hour, even. See, give us serf scrabblers an inch and we’ll try anything on…
Jack, you know if you pay the inferior orders more they won’t work hard or be compliant. We don’t want to stifle aspiration either.
I really go to work for the sheer privilege of servitude alone…
How good is penury and servitude, eh Jack!
We need more bootlickers like you, Jack, to keep this country on the straight and narrow. I was going to disclaim my peerage after the election but I now see golden days ahead!
This article must be completely wrong. I say that based on the fact that last nights’ news on 2 commercial channels and a state-run mouthpiece were all highlighting the massive increase in weekly incomes and extra $1 coffees from 7/11 for unskilled and low-skilled workers. This news quickly followed by business leaders and chambers of commerce bemoaning the impending economic disaster these charity payments in return for zero productivity increase will surely cause…
Should I put a “/s” in here somewhere?
So, if I follow the ‘If you increase the minimum wage, we will have to employ less people’ argument to its natural conclusion, we can achieve full employment by paying less and less. Or, am I missing something? Of course those very poorly paid workers would not be able to buy anything, pay for their food, accomodation or education. So, they would need a second, third or fourth job just to tread water, sort of speak. Wow, so that’s where some very well placed people in Australia want the place to go back to – a dark age, where the 14th richest economy in the world (out of 204) is a great place to be rich, and a hell hole if you’re not.
Cmon scomo, you now have the mandate to screw the serfs into the ground, take their penalty rates, their holidays,sick pay, super and anything else your rich benefactors want of you, keep your stooges at fairwork australia grinding back their pay rates and import a few thousand more cheap 457 navies to put even more downward pressure on wages, you know they may whinge a bit but the dumb bastards will still vote for you so do a thatcher on them, privatise the hospitals ,education, sell of whats left of the public services to your mates and give SBS and the ABC to your best mate Rupert, why not privatise the water authorities, and dont forget to jack up Howards GST to 25% and put it on everything, that should free up more billions for tax cuts for your rich mates and corporate benefactors and and dont forget to do a Mal Fraser and get rid of medicare and jack up university fees too, better to keep them poor and sick and even dumber than may 18th just in case.
The coalition induced recession is well under way and is just retribution for the idiots who re elected this corrupt coalition rabble, by 2021 voters suffering should be enough to guarantee a complete rout at the ballot box and in the meantime I`ll sit back and enjoy morrisons punishment to the dumb masses for his gratitude to them for giving him another term.
TheYeah man!
Thank god I’m a poor penniless pensioner, the Govt is scare stiff of us.
Screw the peasants and give us more. Climate change is gonna cream them anyway.
Friends in construction tell me we are already in recession. That ain’t proof that we are, just indicative.
The problem comes when the libs pull their preferred levers of tax cuts to the wealthy as their response, leaving our coffers empty and having zero effect on the economy.
Cmon scomo, you now have the mandate to screw the serfs into the ground, take their penalty rates, their holidays,sick pay, super and anything else your rich benefactors want of you, keep your stooges at fairwork australia grinding back their pay rates and import a few thousand more cheap 457 navies to put even more downward pressure on wages, you know they may whinge a bit but the dumb bastards will still vote for you so do a thatcher on them, privatise the hospitals ,education, sell of whats left of the public services to your mates and give SBS and the ABC to your best mate Rupert, why not privatise the water authorities, and dont forget to jack up Howards GST to 25% and put it on everything, that should free up more billions for tax cuts for your rich mates and corporate benefactors and and dont forget to do a Mal Fraser and get rid of medicare and jack up university fees too, better to keep them poor and sick and even dumber than may 18th just in case.