LaborNET Health Services Union of Australia
Search   
Home | Ask Neale | Calendar | Links 

  LaborNET Sites

Workers Online
ACTU
NZCTU
Unions NSW
VIC Trades Hall Council
Vic Union Health & Safety Network
Unions WA
UNIONSAFE
Union Teach
Bosswatch
Unions on LaborNET
Evatt Foundation
South Coast Labor Council


  

Union Positions
Industrial Relations Customer Service Officer – Full Time
Communications and Media Officer (4 days a week)
Area Organiser (6 month position with view to permanent)
National Industry Coordinator
Submit a Job

UNIONSAFE
Latest News
Safety Helpdesk
Shoptalk
Youthsafe

Union Teach
Lesson Plans
Resources
Factsheets
Glossary
Feedback
Links

IR Resources
IR Commissions
IR Departments
Legal Resources

LaborNET Calendar

APHEDA: Union Aid Abroad
Latest News
Current Campaigns

Websites for Unions
Organising Online
Publish your own content

Chifley Financial Services
Home Loans
Financial Planning
Insurance

Union Shopper

 

ACTU wants $27 minimum wage rise

Date: 17 March 2010

Unions will seek a $27 a week pay rise for workers on minimum wages who deserve their fair share of the economic recovery after unfairly shouldering the burden of the downturn.

The ACTU will seek the pay rise for 1.4 million award-dependent workers who suffered a wage freeze in the middle of last year's economic slowdown.

Announcing the amount of the claim in a speech to the National Press Club in Canberra today, ACTU Secretary Jeff Lawrence said a decent pay rise was needed to restore the real value of minimum wages.
Mr Lawrence said the ACTU's submission to Fair Work Australia's annual wages review this Friday would be for an extra $27 a week, or 71 cents an hour.

It would lift the minimum wage from $543.78 to $570.78, and for the first time the National Minimum Wage would be more than $15 an hour.

The ACTU claim would represent a pay increase of 4.2% for the average award minimum wage worker, on the benchmark tradesperson's rate.

"The real story of the Global Financial Crisis is the sacrifices made by ordinary working people," Mr Lawrence said.

"Not only did Australia's unemployment ranks grow by 185,000 and those remaining in jobs worked harder and longer days, but low-paid workers had their wages frozen.

"In true Australian fashion, its time to repay the favour for those sacrifices. Fairness says it's finally time for a decent rise in minimum wages.

"Low paid workers are resilient and resourceful. They don't want a freebie. They do it tough and they deserve a fair share."

Mr Lawrence said the ACTU's claim would be responsible and was being made in a period of economic recovery, with the outlook for a return to normal growth this year.

Pressures on inflation are low, while the case for a pay increase is strong.

Mr Lawrence said having endured a pay freeze in last year's downturn, it would be unfair for minimum wage workers to be further left behind as the economy picks up.

"Without a catch-up in minimum wages, these low-paid workers will slip further behind - increasing income inequality," Mr Lawrence said.

In his speech to the National Press Club today, Mr Lawrence also called for a review of the "social wage" to address increasing inequality in Australia.

He said this review should include a fairer and more equitable tax system, quality health care, aged care and education for all, and dignity in retirement through lifting the superannuation guarantee to 15%.

"We need to review, as a nation, how we ensure that everyone can afford the basic standards of living," Mr Lawrence said.

For further information

Contact: Mark Phillips
Union: ACTU
Contact Mobile: 0422 009 011
WWW: http://www.actu.org.au/


Live News Feed
Current Stories | Yearly Archive | Organisation Indexes | Topic Index
Privacy | Disclaimer | Sitemap |Feedback | Links  
© 1997-2002 LaborNET is a resource for the labour movement
provided by the Labor Council of NSW
10th Floor, 377-383 Sussex Street, Sydney NSW 2000
Ph: (02) 9264 1691 Fax: (02) 9261 3505

http://www.labor.net.au/news/1268803984_30949.html
Last Modified: Wednesday, 17-Mar-2010 16:34:54 EST

LaborNET is proudly created, designed and programmed
by Social Change Online for the Labor Council of NSW
[Credits] [Site Matters]

Workers OnlineLabor Council of NSWLaborNET
Powered by APT Solutions