
One lesson to be drawn from Labor’s employment white paper is that the nation’s bipartisan commitment to menacing and immiserating the jobless and underemployed seems destined to roll on unabated.
Another is confirmation — if we needed it — that the politics of the current moment is spectacularly lacking in courage or answers. After all, political failure invariably betrays a failure of imagination.
What the paper doesn’t lack, however, is an overriding political fidelity to the neoliberal consensus. On the contrary, it percolates the paper, even if thinly disguised by rhetoric of a “new, bolder” vision of an economy where “full employment” is defined to mean “everyone who wants a job” can find one “without having to search for too long”.
Scratch this rhetoric away and what remains by way of policy change is little that points to a material shift in the status quo for the unemployed, much less a deviation from one of the most pernicious political deceptions in living memory.
For decades, the country has been sold the lie that the unemployed, as a general rule, naturally meet the description of “bludgers” or “leaners”. People who, to borrow from the canon of Morrison grandiloquence, haven’t mastered the fundamental lesson that to “get a go, you must have a go”. When in reality, as Professor Ross Garnaut has recently written, both the federal government and the Reserve Bank have long insisted on a pool of what we might call the involuntary unemployed to suppress wages and keep inflation low.
It’s true governments of both persuasions have never expressly acknowledged so much, though it’d be foolish to expect anything else.
The idea their chosen economic policy settings have deliberately (and unnecessarily) impoverished hundreds of thousands, on the basis the economy supposedly mandates a “natural” level of unemployment to control inflation, is something of an invisible blood-sport for a reason. If people understood the deception being played, most would probably find it intolerable and condemn these realities as something to which no civilised society should freely submit, particularly when sound alternatives exist.
And so, to the minds of politicians, it’s better and more politically expedient to bypass the cognitive dissonance that ensues by invoking the spectre of the lazy and wilfully unemployed. Hence the misnomers “Jobseeker”, “Newstart” and “mutual obligations”, which deceptively reframe unemployment as something irrevocably or pathologically tied to the individual themselves, as opposed to the desired macro-economic outcome that it so often is.
All this in turn licenses an institutionalised duplicity of the worst kind, and one whose logical endpoint finds ugly reflection in the nadir of robodebt and today’s manufactured hierarchy of winners and losers.
But there are reasons to think this neoliberal conception of “full employment” — called the non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment (NAIRU) — is seriously fraught, at least so far as NAIRU estimates have consistently overestimated the minimum level of unemployment society can ostensibly sustain before inflation begins to rise. To the government’s credit, this much the white paper has been prepared to acknowledge.
What it has shied away from confronting, however, is the simple tale distilled in today’s economic conditions: the NAIRU is not fit for purpose.
For one thing, it’s notable that over the past several months, none of the Reserve Bank’s spooky warnings about a wage-price spiral have come to pass, even as the country continues to contend with stubbornly high inflation. Indeed, wage growth has been decidedly modest and non-existent in real terms, which is all the more striking given unemployment has been sitting at 50-year-lows of between 3.4% and 3.7% for the past 15 months.
On the logic of what passes for orthodox monetary thinking, this confluence of factors should have conversely given way to excessive wage growth and spiralling inflation, but it hasn’t.
Zooming out, there are at least two considerations that explain this puzzle. One is that the Reserve Bank’s modelling wrongly takes as its starting point the assumption that inflation is caused by demand-side considerations, even though, by its own admission, the inflation of today owes to a combination of supply-side disruptions and pandemic budgetary stimulus measures.
The other is that a ’70s-style wage-price spiral — where workers demand high wages to compensate for price inflation — assumes a level of worker bargaining power that simply doesn’t exist these days due to the forces unleashed by market deregulation, globalisation and falling union membership.
And to this we should add that the central bank’s narrow focus on “unemployment” in its modelling is altogether too blunt, ignoring as it does the high prevalence of underemployment within the economy.
The government’s white paper expressly acknowledges the last point but politely sweeps from view the others in its statement that the NAIRU, though “useful” in its opinion, doesn’t “capture the full extent of spare capacity in our economy or the full potential of our workforce”.
It then goes on to emphasise that on its reckoning there are some 2.8 million people in Australia who want to work or would like to work more hours than they do. Noting this and the tendency of the NAIRU to grossly inflate what seemingly constitutes a desirable level of unemployment, it proceeds to detail some ways existing policy settings can be tinkered with so the NAIRU is driven down over time to better reflect reality.
These include changes to the aged pension — by increasing the number of hours pensioners can work before seeing a reduction in their pension — as well as a doubling of the period in which other welfare recipients can retain social security benefits, such as concession cards, when they secure work, to further incentivise the uptake of jobs.
In other words, the white paper proposes to dither around the frayed edges of the NAIRU, seeking to improve its accuracy, rather than jettisoning it for the comprehensive public policy failure that it is. Under these damaging policy settings, a pool of the systematically unemployed would persist, unfairly consigning thousands to the shackles of punitive destitution by design.
And it’s from this vantage point that the white paper entrenches the greatest institutionalised deception of all. For after all, using unemployment as a buffer against inflation is, and always has been, a political choice, as many progressive economists have pointed out. It is not, as the white paper would have you believe, an unavoidable albeit unfortunate necessity.
The tragedy of the current moment is that if the government’s aspiration of “full employment” was genuine — if it truly wanted to harness the benefits of employment to improve individual and national wellbeing and consign unemployment and its unhappy sequelae to the past — providing a full-time job to all the unemployed and underemployed who want one would be a far more effective answer.
Proposals for a federal jobs guarantee have of course been around for years, and have been enjoying a renaissance in thinking in both the United Kingdom and the United States in recent years.
Part of its beauty — aside from being an effective antidote to neoliberalism and a shrinking middle class — is that, paid at the minimum wage, it wouldn’t be inflationary, and estimates of its fiscal impact are consistent with there being no need to raise taxes. At the same time, it would be entirely voluntary, providing people with the dignity of a job as a universal right accessible to all. Poverty would recede, the spectre of recessions would fade, as would the divisive scapegoating of welfare recipients.
In a nod to the idea’s growing popularity, the Biden administration just last week revitalised a version of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Civilian Conservation Corps — renamed the “Climate Corps” — with the program designed to employ 20,000 underemployed Americans at the living wage in its first year to fight climate change.
Put differently, it’s possible to reverse the damaging social and environmental effects of neoliberalism by looking to the past (including our own pre-1970s definitions of “full employment”) with an inspiring modern twist. The alternative is the policy vacuum we confront, vacated by bipartisan allegiance to neoliberalism and its unceasing indifference to the poor.
Terrific stuff, Ms McGregor, wonderful to see discussion of a Federal Job Guarantee in the mainstream media.
One benefit of such a scheme – apart from not wasting millions of hours of productive labour capacity every single day – would be how much harder it would be for exploiters of workers in the gig economy to find the desperate vassals they need to operate. Who would take a dangerous job delivering food on a scooter for a pittance if you could get minimum wage work in your local area doing something actually useful?
I suspect a lot of the exploited workers of the gig economy might be… ineligible… for any JG programme.
Why? We don’t really have a problem with undocumented migrants etc. Why should anyone have to submit to being part of the precariat?
Non-residents (arguably non-citizens) should not be part of any JG scheme.
I have to agree
JG WOULD BE A GOOD START TO PERHAPS PAY AGED CARERS REAL WAGES – not under cutting via the skills shortage media narrative lies ; why would we be such a destination for international students ? The jobs went due to sell offs under neoliberal zealots and ya all just accept the neo libs narratives .. and reckon housing shortages are not about corporatized buy ups of housing atocks and over zealous conservative immigration of upper classes to tip voting into Conservative hands permanently
The liberal economic fantasy that a well-functioning job market will naturally find its equilibrium and bring about (near-)full employment and tolerable inflation if only the market is allowed to do its work wilfully ignores the baked-in power imbalances that our dysfunctional industrial relations system enforces on working people. This is an industrial relations system that allows dues-paying union members to bear all the costs of bargaining, while free-riders can get all the benefits without paying bargaining fees, and which imposes all kinds of obstacles on industrial action by workers while there are no such restraints on employer lockouts by firms such as Alan Joyce’s Qantas. The AFR and Moloch press are shrieking about Tony Burke’s modest reforms to industrial relations, but these still leave the essential architecture of the Fair Work Act (alias WorkChoices Lite) intact. In short, wages are lagging because the bosses still have too much power and workers not enough.
And laws making msny strikes industrial action illegal – like climate protesting – Sa draconian anti protest laws under Labor ! Gough is rolling in his grave – a disgrace and scary right wing for the main stream alternative ?!
“In other words, the white paper proposes to dither around the frayed edges of the NAIRU,”
”dither” is the right word to describe much of what this government is doing. Too scared of their own shadow to do anything decisive and significant about anything much. Also – they just don’t care. They’ll do (or pretend to) only as much as they think is needed to ensure another electoral victory. And if they think they need more votes they’d rather look for them on the right amongst the voters abandoned by the Coalition than on the left, you know, where their own abandoned voters are.
Do I sound cynical? It’s because I am.
you are bang on
Casualisation and short-term contracts are a curse. Illegality of workers’ strikes another. Creeping loss of rights such as overtime loadings. Meaningless skewed statistics and definitions. Insane immigration numbers. Insignificant local training. There are 8 points right there that need addressing if the government is serious about lifting people out of poverty. And that’s without mentioning the amount of the dole etc which could be done tomorrow.
Alborrison continues to rule for the rich, the powerful and the bosses, all others can go and jump in a lake, off a cliff or in front of a bus for all that the government cares.
Oh, and what a pleasant white paper it is. Joy oh joy. Hope springs eternally – down the toilet.
You had me on all points bar the tired immigration trope
If it is 400,000 this year, as reported, I’d call it stretching the bounds of reasonableness, anyway. Unless a similar number are departing to make room. Housing being the issue.
They’re not. 400,000 is a net figure.
But it’s OK because they’re schroedinger’s migrants. There when you need them to do work and consume, but not there when it comes to housing, medical care, public transport, etc.
But surely they were proved capable of being in two places at once? And to travel at the speed of light, except on Qantas? Goes to show that even a red-shift doesn’t always help much. Or is the white dwarf going to disappear in a black hole? An event horizon that would please Darth Dutton as he descends on us from planet Nemesis!
Sorry to be silly.
Immeasurably so.
yes 1.5 million in 3 years is the figure ! Indeed and some reckon they do not understand aboriginals ! Seriously and some do thank Goawd – But just crazy but them coffers to welcome casghed up skills liberal voters you betcha wake up and do not assume racism tropes its lazy when the poor women if Afganistan are under Taliban just cause they were notconsidered right for immigration and were more than worthy ! Where was the outrage ?
If you think we have too much immigration now, just wait for the climate to start to bite hard in some parts of the world. They’ll be flooding through our doors, over the back fence, coming up through tunnels in our living rooms. We won’t be able to stop them.
Too easy and lazy, but been reinforced since the time of Howard…..
The political and media establishment has been 100% behind high immigration since Howard kicked it off in the ’00s.
To the point where there’s a Pavlovian response of “racist” to even the slightest querying of it.
The only voices now raised against it are because Labor is in power.
Yup. Hundreds of thousands of additional people each year who somehow don’t need housing, medical care, public transport, schools, or anything. They just spend they brought with them and fill
exploitation jobs“skills gaps”.No not necessarily
Sorry it is exactly about numbers of available jobs , homes , school places , health care – options for koalas and not pulling down our standards to make development corporations dividends ; finite environmental resources – Why would you just open up ya 4 bedrrom home to 20 people who might be more worthy than you-? No you look after your family first – oh such an assumption just to play the benevolent one- but shame out goes logic to what is it ? Be a nice guy – where has that got the indigineous owners ? Hope the immigrants understand everyone they have a duty to vote Yes to indiginous Voice – some have the gaul to say No !
‘Insane immigration numbers’ ignoring the equally massive decline during Covid, dominated by international students who are temporary resident churn over under the NOM (since 2006), included in estimated resident population, including working age cohort and overwhelming majority depart, what’s the issue?
Does not preclude improved awards and conditions to ensure minimum wages, super etc.; what’s good for immigrants is also good for local employees.
Unions have a great opportunity now due to demographic decline in working age cohort of the permanent population, kept up by temporary churn over of temporaries, as the baby boomer ‘bomb’ transitions to retirement (then the big die off starting in several years), leading to ever increasing (for next twenty years) old age dependency ratios i.e. more BB oldies need more working age PAYE taxpayers to support budgets.
But., most prefer to deflect to and blame (undefined) immigrants to avoid taking on powers that be, think tanks, media, unions, government and Australians’ passive and complacent attitudes.
I’m not one of those who worry about migrants taking jobs. Migrants increase employment as has long been recognised. But they have to have a bed to sleep in and a roof over their heads. 0.7% vacancy rate in rentals in my town of 40,000. $500p.w. for an old asbestos house. After Perth the next biggest town in WA is Bunbury with a rental vacancy rate of 0.4%. Incomes here are generally lower than in the city, and costs are higher with so much being trucked the extra 400km from Perth, and of course much of what we buy comes over the Nullarbor to Perth. Only saying this to demonstrate that housing is a big problem, even here, which extra people cannot help but aggravate. Many people cannot come up with a house deposit of $100,000, so they are being forced to pay high rents that put them increasingly into poverty.
Unions are not a shadow of their former selves, having been beaten into submission by ever more threatening IR policy. This is the main reason why the ‘wage spiral’ has had little effect on inflation, simply because it doesn’t exist outside of a few imaginations and propaganda machines.
As more and more families cannot pay the rent because of all this, including union weakness, the point will come when passive and complacent attitudes are replaced by anger, and we start to see tear gas and baton charges in the streets. The normal right of people to protest has gone, as can clearly be seen as governments lock up climate protesters. We are becoming ever more susceptible to, say, a sudden big hike in international petrol prices. Shit happens, and I’m not complacent.
Understand, but headline data does not reveal anything, except guesswork and especially suboptimal real estate data scraped from real estate media or given by the same? Since when don’t we have real ‘cost of living crises’ for many low income, permanently vs. middle class whining (inc. friends, before travelling to Europe….)?
Good example is someone local who has two places, because working interstate, i.e. an apartment in Adelaide, and a main residence is a five bedroom ’empty nest’ home in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs, with his wife.
Housing supply is very diverse, esp. for temporary on those under the NOM inc. hostels (backpackers), homestays (massive for students), much specialised student accommodation on campus, CBD’s and suburbs then word of mouth house/apt shares; but generally matches quite different demand versus settled locals and permanent immigrants.
Good analysis drills into postcodes and streets, remote, regional, suburbs and CBDs, so till we see good grass roots data analysis used in research, we are left to rely on media commentary or opinions (often biased towards FIRE &/or against immigrants) and housing NGOs to evaluate electricity or water usage via meters to calculate/estimate numbers of empty properties.
The latter highlights one of the central issues, much analysis, not just on property, is suboptimal on supply when we rely on FIRE sector to inform us?
Right. So given the choice between the data that DOES exist (vacancy rates, increasing rents, increasing homelessness), or the data that DOES NOT exist (everything you say would show there’s not actually any widespread problems at all but cant support, and the anecdote you give is representative of probably a fraction of a percent of scenarios), you say decisions should be made based on the latter ?
WSP LOOK IT UP
Where is the credible data analysis that is not based on headline data e.g. outside of entities within the FIRE sector vs. deeper independent or academic analysis, avoided by media, that drills downs & also works up from the grass roots?
Doesn’t matter what the data source is. You always say it’s not credible if it doesn’t match your narrative.
I ignore headlines, I’m going on people I know (such as my son) and their actual lived experience right now. There may well be lots of empty houses, but if they are unavailable they may as well not be there as far as the old lady who lives in a water tank is concerned – if there are any! So an analysis of all the things you list does not produce more housing. I only know local problems in my region, but similar reports from around the country then ring true because of my local knowledge. It seems to me we have a housing crisis which no level of government is tackling – and when you consider the room we have and the wealth it begins to look deliberate, no excuse. Hence my comment about the insane level of immigration. I have nothing other than the housing issue against migrants. I am one myself, 1966, and one of the great things I love about Australia is its diversity and variety of people from all over. And I don’t blame migrants for the lack of housing, I blame the tax system for having skewed things in favour of the top end of town. And with no end in sight!
Fair cop and a very complex field.
History has shown the world over, politicians and media practise or defer to xenophobia, i.e. ‘last refuge of scoundrels’ to deflect from suboptimal domestic policies and outcomes; classic is impact of fossil fuels & carbon emissions blamed on outsiders, to then avoid robust regulation and constraints.
Yes, and the fossil fuel industry works cleverly to make us all feel guilty and helpless for using the damned stuff, when we should be stringing the pollies up from the nearest power pole for enabling the pollution. I expect it’s all psychology, and we’re easy to read en masse.
The problem with your theory is that the political and media establishment has been strongly in favour of immigration.
Until Labor entered Government nearly any suggestion that high immigration might have negative consequences was met with, at best, ridicule.
Yes and no. Have you ever heard of the white Australia policy, and how RW MSM have been dog whistling refugees, immigrants and population growth since the time of Howard and boosting fossil fuels by claiming the same as environmental hygiene issues?
Other than refugees, this is false. Indeed, it’s not only false, it’s the opposite of what’s actually happened. As you know.
You are being dishonest. Again.
See MacroBusiness, but one presumes understanding of their obsessions, while they claim to be centre or left, then barking at ALP, Greens, unions, immigrants, NOM, international students, universities & population growth, originally channeling ‘Australia’s best demographer’ and a faux environmental NGO based on Tanton and ZPG 🙂
Give you a heads up on US end, it’s very right wing, nativist and authoritarian.
LOL. Macrobusiness is not even remotely “MSM”, especially not a decade ago.
And nothing but ad hominem, as usual.
Hi, reply pending appro.
upwardly mobile skilled conservatives myopic votes
Concur – much clearer than my florid long winding exhortations
Not in front of a bus. All the buses are privately owned and operated. We wouldn’t want to inconvenience capitalists
And arguably removes the need for a legislated minimum wage at all – because who’s going to work for less than the JG job pays ? The beauty of this, is that it could be localised to allow for different costs of living (ie: a JG job has a wage set according to local living costs, not nationally).