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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Sunday, 1 July 2018
Pay rise for politicians as penalty rates trimmed further in hospitality and retail
The annual base salary of a federal backbencher will increase from $203,000 to $207,000 from 1 July.
Photograph: Mike Bowers for the Guardian
Australia’s federal politicians, senior public servants, and members
of the judiciary will enjoy a 2% pay rise on Sunday, while hospitality
and retail workers will see their penalty rates cut for the second year in a row.
Large taxation and wage changes will affect millions of people from 1 July, the start of the new financial year.
The independent Remuneration Tribunal decided last month to award
federal politicians a 2% pay increase from 1 July, matching a 2% rise in
July last year, and a 2% rise in January 2016.
Malcolm Turnbull will enjoy a weekly pay rise of $203 next week,
worth more than $10,500 a year, lifting his annual salary to more than
$538,000.
The Treasurer, Scott Morrison, will see his annual pay increase to
more than $388,200, and the pay of the Labor leader, Bill Shorten, will
rise to $384,000.
The annual base salary of a federal backbencher will increase from $203,000 to $207,000.
But workers in the hospitality, fast food, pharmacy and retail industries will have their penalty rates cut on Sunday.
It follows a decision by the Fair Work Ombudsman
last year to cut rates for public holidays, and steadily reduce penalty
rates for the next four years, for award-dependent workers in
particular industries.
On Sunday, full-time and part-timeworkers in the
hospitality industry will have their Sunday penalty rates cut by 10%,
while causal workers will continue to receive the same rate.
In retail, full-time and part-time workers will see their Sunday penalty rates cut by 15%, while casuals will lose 10%.
Wage rise of 3.5% for Australia's lowest paid workers – video
For fast food workers, the penalty rates will drop 10%, and pharmacy workers face a 15% cut.
The cuts in penalty rates coincide with the first stage of the
Turnbull government’s $144bn, seven-year personal income tax plan, will
rolls out this weekend.
Workers earning up to $125,000 a year will receive a tax rebate
between $200 and $530, depending on their income, when they file their
2018-19 tax return next year.
Those earning more than $87,000 will also receive a tax cut, because
the top threshold of the 32.5% tax bracket will be increased from
$87,000 to $90,000 from 1 July.
The Australian Council of Trade Unions says the personal income tax
cuts will not be enough to prevent some workers being worse off.
Grade 5 cooks earning $54,514 will gain $530 from the tax rebate, but
could lose $1,000 from the cut in Sunday penalty rates, and $232 from
last year’s cut to public holiday penalty rates, leaving them $702 worse
off overall.
Permanent pharmacists will gain $530 from the tax rebate, but could
lose $1,693 from the cut in Sunday penalty rates, leaving them worse by
$1,163.
The
ACTU says polling shows voters are concerned about the four-year
program of penalty rate cuts in the electorates of Swan and Hasluck in
Western Australia, Flynn and Capricornia in Queensland, and Dunkley and
Corangamite in Victoria.
It asked ReachTel to conduct the polling on 25 June, using an
automated telephone-based survey system, under which the numbers and the
person within the household were selected at random, and the results
weighted by gender and age to reflect the population according to ABS
figures.
ReachTel asked voters: “The Labor party has introduced a bill to
federal parliament to restore penalty rates that could benefit up to
700,000 workers. Do you approve or disapprove of Labor’s plan to restore
penalty rates?”
A majority of voters wanted the penalty rate cuts restored.
Of the 1,161 voters surveyed in Capricornia, 48.6% strongly approved and
20.3% somewhat approved, while 31% somewhat or strongly disproved.
The results were similar in other jurisdictions – 65.2% approved out
of 1,207 voters in Flynn; 56.3% approved out of 752 voters in Swan,
68.9% out of 910 voters in Hasluck; 70.5% out of 1,195 voters in
Dunkley; and 65% approved out of 1,322 voters in Corangamite.
“The Turnbull government is cutting the pay of 700,000 people who
rely on penalty rates at the same time as they’re delivering handouts to
big business,” ACTU secretary, Sally McManus, said.
“It’s not surprising that the twin policies of taking away from
working people and giving public money to big business are so unpopular.
These ideas have been proven not to benefit the community. These are
bad ideas.”
Last month, the Reserve Bank governor, Philip Lowe, warned a forum for central bankers
in Portugal that “the relationship between wages and unemployment looks
to have changed” because historically the current level of unemployment
should see Australia with wage growth of about 3.7%, but it was stuck about 2.1%.
He also referenced a research paper on productivity, wage growth and unions,
of which he said “the evidence is pretty compelling – changes in
industrial relations arrangements in Germany have affected wage and
employment outcomes and the Australian experience is very similar to the
German one. It’s hard to escape the conclusion that changes in
industrial relations has changed the inflation process.”
On 1 July, the minimum wage will increase by 3.5% to $18.93 per hour, following a Fair Work Commission ruling last month.
It means the national minimum wage rises to $719.20 per week, an
increase of $24.30 on the basis of 38 ordinary working hours a week.
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