mreditor16
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- Joined
- Apr 4, 2014
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- HSC
- 2014
Some feedbacklol I'm terrible at micro policy, but here goes
Deregulation is the removal of government intervention in the operation of markets with the objective of promoting efficiency and productivity. Deregulation has occurred in Australian markets since 1983 to increase efficiency, productivity and to promote technological innovation.
In 1992, Telecommunications industry underwent deregulation where Telstra was privatised and was no longer owned by the government. This reduced government expenditure in this industry, resulting in reallocation of government’s resources to other sectors of the economy. Since private companies are more interested in making profits (unlike government owned enterprises), Telstra underwent rapid increases in efficiency through reducing costs to increase its profitability and increasing productivity, which increased productivity growth in the economy.
In 1991 under the Prices Accord, there was the introduction of enterprise bargaining. Enterprise bargaining agreements are made by negotiation between employers and employees with the potential advantage of employees being offered minimum pay rates which are above the employment conditions in awards. Enterprise bargaining is also efficient because wage rises are linked to productivity increases, and thus employees are indirectly paying for their wage increase, also preventing cost – push inflation from rising.
With enterprise bargaining however, there is the problem of the greater labour market segmentation where employees on higher incomes have a higher bargaining power than low income earners. Nevertheless, this encourages those on low incomes to increase their skill levels, allowing them to increase their bargaining power. Increased bargaining power can result in increased productivity and thus wage rises can be offered via enterprise bargaining. In effect, this would further increase productivity growth in the Australian economy. As a result, productivity increased from 1.3% in 1983 to 2.1% in 1990s.
* the bolded part is too specific and is probably wrong. there may be some deregulation that has happened prior, but we don't know about it. so don't make any sort of generalisation like that, which can annoy the marker.
* you've largely answered the Q as if it was asking for X examples of deregulation in the Aus economy. but the Q is asking what are the effects of deregulation. so examples/'case studies' like that you have provided should be used to back up your points, not to be the substance of your answer, which is what has happened in your answer. so try to fix that up
* you definitely need to explain the green part more clearly. it is a very good point, but it hasn't been fleshed out enough.
* try tying back your 3rd paragraph to the Q more strongly.
* the red part is pretty much irrelevant and adds nothing to your answer, especially in terms of answering the Q
* the blue part sounds like a sweeping generalisation, and defs needs to be explained more
* the purple stat is relevant, but your use is dodgy. you can't just imply that what you talked about in your last paragraph is the reason why that change in productivity occurred. try phrasing it such that you say it contributed
Overall though, a decent answer. The first two paragraphs were quite strong but it fell apart a bit at the end. so I would say 3/5