wats that from? movie? tv show?chelsea girl said:"A good compromise is when both parties are dissatisfied, and I think that's what we have here."
wats that from? movie? tv show?chelsea girl said:"A good compromise is when both parties are dissatisfied, and I think that's what we have here."
I didn't know that the Liberals have been in power for the past 32 years. That's so painfully long.frog12986 said: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.
Yes. It was too obvious that I was being sarcastic.jb_nc said:lol, fail
LABOR leader Kevin Rudd has seized a bizarre fate -- a resurrection of trade union power, collective bargaining rights and a far stronger industrial umpire as the keys to The Lodge.
Rudd's new industrial policy is a giant step into the past. Indeed, so sweeping is Labor's embrace of the principles of collective power and re-regulation that it must be wondered whether Rudd fully comprehends what he has done.
It is the most intriguing question from the ALP national conference.
Neither Rudd's spin as the leader of the future nor his selling of the policy as a homily to family values can disguise its reality - this is a radical re-casting against individual discretion, employers and small business in favour of collective power, trade unions and third-party enforcement.
With this policy, Rudd forfeits any chance of being a serious rival to John Howard on economic policy. He looks a conventional leader using spin to pose as a modernist.
The mechanics of the decision are telling. The policy is a collaboration between two of Labor's best brains, ACTU chief Greg Combet and deputy leader Julia Gillard. It has not been approved by the Opposition front bench. It has not been vetted by Labor's business guru, Rod Eddington. It was not debated at national conference because it mirrors a Labor-ACTU consensus. Key sections were kept from business before the announcement.
It draws a line in the sand. It defines Rudd's election strategy as a joint and massive assault by Labor and the trade unions against Work Choices.
At this point Labor loses the goodwill of big business, the hope of winning small business and the dream that it stands for entrepreneurship. [...]
We are looking at these new Labor IR policies in the wrong way. We can't look at them in terms of how good the policy is or the benefit to the economy because that is not their goal.volition said:A
"PARENTS would have the legal right to demand flexible working hours in the first five years of their children's lives in a radical work policy unveiled by federal Labor yesterday." - This is quite possibly one of the stupidest IR plans I've ever heard. Sure, it might be well meaning, but it has no grounding in practicality. Such a policy encourages discrimination against parents/people of childbearing age being employed in the first place, not to mention dropping the hammer on businesses (particularly small business).
"The policy, unashamedly pitched at the Coalition's voter heartland of working families, would also give working parents the right to up to 24 months of unpaid parental leave." - You mean someone can go away for 2 whole years and you can't fill their position with permanent staff?
I'd like to see what "reasonable business grounds" means. Probably more red tape that will detract from our economic growth, as businesses have to spend money complying with it, rather than spending on things that actually help society.
LOL. It must've been the work experience kid who did this. What Rudd was trying to imply was that those working on public holidays should been paid extra or receive holiday pay.volition said:"Reinstatement of all public holidays, such as Christmas and Boxing Days." - Don't we already have these?
I think he means that the worker can be guaranteed a place when they're back. I don't know about this one. In my opinion 24 months is a bit too long. Maybe 12 months will do.volition said:"The policy, unashamedly pitched at the Coalition's voter heartland of working families, would also give working parents the right to up to 24 months of unpaid parental leave." - You mean someone can go away for 2 whole years and you can't fill their position with permanent staff?
I do believe that workers should have just a little bit more rights at work especially the lowest paid workers and other workers who'll suffer a lot from AWAs. I think that's what Rudd is planning to do.Nebuchanezzar said:Then again, it can't be good for the citizens of a country to have to endure Howard's work"choices" legislation for much longer. Suppose we can just blame the coalition for starting this foofaraw in the first place.
Even Malcolm Fraser dislikes what John Howard is doing. (not concerning workplace laws here)Malcolm Fraser, himself
"The politics of these issues was exploited by the Government and has bitten deeply into the Australian psyche.
I would love to see some rock hard evidence that suggests that this legislation has had a beneficial impact on the economy. Thus far, I've seen empty reasoning from frog12896 and that's about it. Howard and Costello continually sing its praises, and yet we see no official figures. The closest we get is a low unemployment rate. That's all well and good, but at what price? Sure more people are employed, but they're treated as not much more than simply pawns, available to hire when nessecary and without basic, fundamental rights. It's lunacy, and unproven lunacy.Sparcod said:I like the fact that AWAs make businesses and the economy grow and hence creates jobs and increases tax revenues and so on but then again, workers lose rights, have family problems and for some, wages go down and so on.
I think it's too early for the effect of this legislation to show up much in economic figures. Although I think there's substansial evidence that a deregulated labour market helps keep unemployment low. Why is the US's unemployment level consistently below the Western European countries unemployment rate? Frankly I think if you have to choose between a low unemployment rate and people at the bottom having less conditions/lower wages and higher unemployment and putting people on the dole the former is much more desirable.Nebuchanezzar said:I would love to see some rock hard evidence that suggests that this legislation has had a beneficial impact on the economy. Thus far, I've seen empty reasoning from frog12896 and that's about it. Howard and Costello continually sing its praises, and yet we see no official figures. The closest we get is a low unemployment rate. That's all well and good, but at what price? Sure more people are employed, but they're treated as not much more than simply pawns, available to hire when nessecary and without basic, fundamental rights. It's lunacy, and unproven lunacy.
That's really no surprise if you know Malcolm Fraser.Even Malcolm Fraser dislikes what John Howard is doing. (not concerning workplace laws here)
If the economy suddenly took a turn for the worst, unemployment rose, real wages decreased, mass sackings occurred, casualisation increased etc, then the ALP would be all over it attributing it to the 'draconian' workplace reforms. Inadvertently, any positive or beneficial data will be utilised by the government to emhpasise the 'favourable' outcomes that have occurred 'due' to the reforms.Nebuchanezzar said:I've seen empty reasoning from frog12896 and that's about it. Howard and Costello continually sing its praises, and yet we see no official figures. The closest we get is a low unemployment rate. That's all well and good, but at what price?
Well here's an article about how BHP Billiton aren't happy with Labor's proposed system, for its lack of flexibility:http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200705/s1910689.htmNebuchanezzar said:I would love to see some rock hard evidence that suggests that this legislation has had a beneficial impact on the economy. Thus far, I've seen empty reasoning from frog12896 and that's about it. Howard and Costello continually sing its praises, and yet we see no official figures. The closest we get is a low unemployment rate. That's all well and good, but at what price? Sure more people are employed, but they're treated as not much more than simply pawns, available to hire when nessecary and without basic, fundamental rights. It's lunacy, and unproven lunacy.
Who is eliminating the minimum wage?zimmerman8k said:eliminating minimum wages reduces unemployment..
:rofl: pwnedbanco55 said:You're obviously not an economics student.