ZabZu said:
So your saying that when people have no job security they are going to work harder? Workers will have the constant fear of being fired and there is a much larger chance of getting injured at work. Workers also need job security because its very hard for unskilled workers to find a new job. Rudd's stance on unfair dismissal is a step in the right direction.
That type of situation is true of economies that face extensive labour surpluses and high levels of unemployment. In Australia, currently and into the future, we are facing a difficult situation whereby we are approaching full employment across all sectors of the economy, and an increasing difficulty for business to find quality employees. If we were in China or even Germany's position we could not of course adopt such a policy, however, the dynamics of our economy are different and subsequently so are our approaches.
Job security is important, however I see no reason why the nature of that security should not be based on the ability of the employee in the workplace, and their contribution to that particular workplace. If we are to better the productivity of this nation, in the face of a dwindling workforce, we cannot continue to reduce the incentive and quality of our employees by pretending that the relationship between job security and performance is not important. Call me anti-humanitarian if you will, however Rudd cannot continue to give platitudes about the productivity problem in this country if he ignores one of the fundamentals; incentive.
Let's not forget, that the reforms of this government have provided more people with the best form of welfare that any government has provided in the past 32 years; employment. The ALP and unions paint a picture of a crumbling economy in the face of draconian reforms, however despite the electorates belief of this picture, reality is a very different story and it seems the only way that this will be recognised is when it disappears.