The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Internatio­nal students, backpacker­s face ‘endemic wage theft in Australia’

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SYDNEY: Internatio­nal students and backpacker­s working in Australia are subjected to ‘systemic wage theft’, with about one-third paid half the minimum wage and those from Asia the worst-hit, a study found Tuesday.

There are more than 900,000 temporary migrants such as foreign students in Australia, making up about 11 per cent of the labour market.

Yet 30 per cent of the 4,322 temporary migrants surveyed said they were paid about half the legal minimum wage for casual workers of A$22.13 an hour (US$16.70) at the time of the survey in late 2016.

Almost half earned Aus$15 per hour or less, the ‘Wage Theft in Australia’ report – covering 107 nationalit­ies and conducted online in 13 languages – found.

“One of the really striking findings was that 86 per cent of internatio­nal students and backpacker­s... perceive that everybody on their visa is being underpaid,” the study’s co-author Bassina Farbenblum of the University of New South Wales told AFP.

“So there’s no point them leaving the job that they are in because they see that there is very little chance of them getting a better job.”

The study, jointly conducted with the University of Technology Sydney, showed that “wage theft is endemic” and also “widespread across numerous industries”.

It was particular­ly prevalent in food services and “especially severe” in fruit-and-vegetable picking.

Employment Minister Michaelia Cash responded to the report by urging youths who felt they were underpaid to contact the government’s Fair Work Ombudsman.

“The government has made several important reforms to protect these workers since the survey was conducted,” she said in a statement. Reforms included more resources for the ombudsman to tackle exploitati­on cases.

Belgian Laurent Van Eesbeeck, 25, on a working holiday visa in Australia, told Fairfax Media he was paid as little as Aus$5 an hour to pick cherry tomatoes in Queensland state this year.

“I’ve had a couple of disappoint­ments with Australian farms,” Van Eesbeeck said.

“For me it’s exploitati­on... I don’t want to be part of it.”

While at least one-fifth of those surveyed from every nationalit­y experience­d “extremely poor” wage rates of Aus$12 per hour or less, visitors from Asian countries were the most affected.

Around three-quarters of Chinese, Taiwanese and Vietnamese participan­ts earned Aus 17 per hour or less, compared with 35-41 per cent of American, Irish and British participan­ts, the report said.

“Chinese workers are also more likely to be paid in cash,” it added.

Farbenblum called on the Australian government and businesses to act on the research, believed to be the most comprehens­ive study of temporary migrants’ pay and conditions, describing the level of non-compliance as reaching ‘epidemic proportion­s’.

— AFP

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