Extract from ABC News
Analysis
Treasurer Jim Chalmers has valiantly called for participants to bring budget-neutral ideas that are not motivated by sectoral self-interest.
What counts as a productivity issue?
This is a failure of economic design. A brutal one.
Because in this country while we have umpteen trained theorists looking at in-built incentives in the tax system or whatever, we still haven't found a way of absorbing the fact that one in seven school children will require mental health assistance every calendar year in Australia, and adding another fact — that children seeking assistance from a trained mental health professional currently wait an average 99 days for an appointment — and deciding that in total this amounts to a national productivity issue.
Who's spending hours on the phone chasing appointments for these children? Losing sleep worrying about them, and standing in as best they can in the meantime? Who's forcing themselves through snowdrifts of confusing paperwork for NDIS registration or in-home care or even just the daily Sisyphean task of finding clean socks, or the shirt without the weird paint stain because everyone just remembered it's school photo day?
We know who's doing it. Australian Institute of Family Studies researcher Jennifer Baxter asked perceptive questions during her COVID-era research and elicited evidence that in around 78 per cent of heterosexual couples, mum is carrying most or all of the mental load.
Every family is different, of course. Many will buck the trend. (Including mine! I'm finishing this column in peace, in a busy week, because my other half has prepped dinner in advance.)
But there's no doubt at all about the broader pattern here. Australian women are better educated than their male counterparts, live longer, do more unpaid work and — where they do get paid for work — get paid less than men. In productivity terms, they are a powerhouse waiting to happen. They account for 70 per cent of the part-time work in Australia, and 70 per cent of the housework. Usually, the flexibility of the former facilitates the accomplishment of the latter.
Economic inequality reaches a high not seen in more than 20 years (Daniel Ziffer)
Assumptions haven't changed since 1880
Australian women work part-time at internationally-remarkable rates so that they can manage the unpaid work that is still generally understood to be their responsibility.
In New South Wales' Public Instruction Act of 1880 — the legislative instrument that established the secular public education system in Australia's largest state and set the school hours that are unchanged to this day — the assumptions are magnificently broad.
For instance, clause 79 of the accompanying regulatory schedule provides that: "In schools containing female children but no female teacher, it will be the duty of the teacher's wife to teach needlepoint to the girls during at least four hours in each week."
It's funny to read this antiquated text. But also, it's worth remembering that the assumptions underpinning school hours have not changed since 1880.
This is kind of wild. And as fast as our assumptions about the rest of the world are changing, there isn't much change to the assumption that women will pick up the extra slack when it comes to caring for other humans, young or old.
It's proper work, in that it requires dedication and expertise, and it's not rendered less valuable economically by the mere fact of being powered by love and concern.
But because we don't count this work using the usual economic measure (ie, paying for it), it sometimes escapes conventional calculations and is just assumed to happen magically, as if fairies do it.
Productivity is something only economists understand, like the non-acceleration inflation rate of unemployment, or the difference between real and nominal GDP. (ABC News: Matt Roberts)
More than an economic concept
Imagine what could be achieved if the productivity drags were removed from the life of the juggling parent! Imagine — for instance — if schools were serviced by dedicated teams of dentists and psychologists and speech pathologists who were right there to help kids exactly when they needed help! Imagine if managing all this was easy, instead of hard!
Imagine if sports and activities were part of the school day, towards the end, so that parents could get their work done and pick up kids who'd made it to footy without having to be ferried there by a distracted parent trying to do a Zoom at the same time, or fretting about having to double back to work later?
Productivity is an economic concept, but it's fired — or should be fired — by the universal human experience of being driven mad by unnecessary bullsh*t that makes life harder. Let's lean in to it!
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