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What Price National Regulation

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The problem of complexity in labour regulation and why it's not about to get ... interstateness, logs of claims, ambit doctrine, respondency issues (or indeed ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What Price National Regulation


1
What Price National Regulation?
  • Professor Andrew Stewart
  • Flinders University
  • IR Society of Qld, 17 June 2005

2
An outline
  • Some points on which the PM and I might agree
    and some points on which we wouldnt
  • The problem of complexity in labour regulation
    and why its not about to get any better

3
Some points of agreement
  • Single, national system preferable
  • Traditional arbitration system can be complex and
    alienating
  • Awards need to be simplified (more intelligible,
    less detail)
  • Expanded floor of minimum conditions

4
Some points of difference
  • Individual agreement-making for most workers
    (esp unskilled/semi-skilled) means
  • unilateral imposition of terms by management
  • standardised rather than individualised terms
  • reduced labour costs, but not necessarily greater
    commitment or productivity
  • No evidence that minimum wage rises or unfair
    dismissal laws cost jobs

5
More points of difference
  • Small businesses should be accommodated, not
    privileged
  • Unions and collective bargaining have a
    legitimate and often productive role
  • AIRC is flexible and responsive, with a positive
    role to play in resolving disputes
  • Integrity of labour regulation should be
    protected against disguised employment
  • cf genuine independent contracting

6
What ought to be common ground
  • Labour regulation should
  • be clear and easy to understand
  • minimise transaction costs
  • empower rather than restrict

7
but apparently isnt!
  • Two claims
  • the trend to unnecessary complexity, detail and
    uncertainty in federal regulation under both
    Labor and the Coalition
  • using the corporations power to create a
    national system wont make for a simpler system
    unless some hard decisions are taken

8
Legislators as control freaks
  • Since 1992, federal regulation has been marked by
  • ever increasing quantity and complexity
  • lack of trust in the AIRC (and to some extent the
    courts)
  • lack of trust in (and hence less autonomy for)
    employers and unions

9
A couple of examples
  • Modifying the effect of transmission of business
  • the 1988 model s 149(1)
  • the 2004 model s 170MBA
  • Electrolux and the need for every clause in an
    agreement to pertain to employment relations
    why isnt it for the parties to decide?

10
More examples of regulationgone mad
  • The protected action provisions
  • The hoops for certifying an agreement
  • The unfair dismissal provisions
  • The FOA provisions
  • Multiplying agencies (OEA, BIT, ABCC, AFPC, FMC,
    etc)

11
Why does it matter?
  • Because ordinary people (including most workers
    and managers) cannot read and understand the WR
    Act
  • Because the more detail regulators add, the more
    uncertainty is created
  • Because legal advice is required at every turn,
    adding cost to what should be simple transactions
    or processes

12
Is it going to get any better?
  • Not judging by the backlog of evolutionary
    amendments, or further reforms announced by PM on
    26/5/05!
  • But will use of the corporations power allow
    creation of a simpler regime?

13
Corporations power advantages
  • Allows direct regulation of employment conditions
  • No need for interstateness, logs of claims, ambit
    doctrine, respondency issues (or indeed awards or
    an independent tribunal)
  • Potential for corporate employers to be subject
    (almost) exclusively to federal regulation

14
How it might be used
  • A possible model for a corporations-based federal
    system
  • corporate employers precluded from coverage by
    State awards, agreements or legislation (except
    workers comp, OHS, perhaps LSL)
  • minimum statutory conditions for all employees of
    corporations, plus Victorian and Territory
    employees
  • to be extended to all other employees as and when
    States refer powers

15
Would this be constitutional?
  • Scope of power to legislate with respect to
    corporations
  • no definitive decision by High Court
  • but probably wide enough to support laws
    specifically directed to corporations employment
    relationships and related matters
  • High Court has traditionally not treated one
    legislative power as being limited by scope of
    another

16
The gaps
  • Unable to cover State government departments and
    unincorporated statutory authorities
  • even for State government agencies that are
    trading corporations, some limitations
  • Many small businesses are not corporations
  • And a few corporations arent trading or
    financial corporations

17
A partial answer?
  • Retain use of the arbitration power (and perhaps
    other powers) in parallel with the corporations
    power
  • But then any chance of simplicity goes out of the
    window!
  • an example the proposed Fair Pay Commission
  • And still scope even then for State regulation
    around the margins

18
The conundrum
  • What matters more to the government?
  • regulation that satisfies its urge to control
    every last detail?
  • regulation that brings as many employers as
    possible into the federal system, regardless of
    how complex that system must become?
  • or regulation thats practical, straightforward
    and easy to understand?
  • Which would you prefer?
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