The Gold Coast Bulletin

Government may back multi-employer pay bid

- COURTNEY GOULD

THE federal government has left the door open to a call for multi-employer pay deals despite a major pushback from big business.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the idea would be “teased out” at the upcoming jobs and skills summit as unions, business and government seek solutions to what they say is a “broken” system.

“I think there’s broad agreement really across all of the various stakeholde­rs that enterprise bargaining isn’t working,” Dr Chalmers told

Sky News. “I think enterprise bargaining is broken. If there are ways to fix it, so we get that sustainabl­e wages growth, we should be looking at it.

“And obviously, in this particular part of the summit … (Employment Minister Tony Burke’s) task will be to see where there is some common ground perhaps in some industries, around multi-employer bargaining and to see if we can move forward together on this front.”

Multi-employer bargaining would allow unions to strike deals to cover more than one employer in an industry rather than negotiatin­g separate enterprise agreements.

Business Council of Australia chief Jennifer Westacott reiterated her concern over the proposal on Sunday, questionin­g if it could cause more problems than it solved. “My concern is that at an industry level, we try to fix one problem and end up with a lot more,” she told the ABC.

She suggested there were potential issues around industry-wide strike action and the impact of multi-employer deals on small businesses, and said these were reasons to pause.

The government will this week hold its jobs and skills summit with unions, employers and other stakeholde­rs coming together to discuss solutions to workplaces shortages and stagnant wages.

Dr Chalmers said he was not looking for “unanimity” but stressed there was common ground to be found.

Both ACTU secretary Sally McManus and Ms Westacott said they wanted Australian­s to be paid more with a lift in the migration cap and the skills shortage to be addressed.

However, the Treasurer said any lift to the migration cap could not come at the expense of training Australian­s.

“We can't fall in the trap of saying migration is a substitute for training, we need to move on both fronts in sensible ways,” Dr Chalmers said.

 ?? ?? Jim Chalmers.
Jim Chalmers.

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