Otago Daily Times

Reality of wages trumps economic dogma

The kiwifruit industry offers an interestin­g insight into how some labour markets work in New Zealand, especially for lowincome jobs, writes Peter Lyons.

- A Peter Lyons teaches economics at Saint Peter’s College in Epsom. He is writing a new text called The Economist’s Secret Handbook.

THE spokesman from the kiwifruit industry was adamant. The shortage of workers willing to pick and pack kiwifruit was due to the sad welfare mentality of some Kiwis.

Beneficiar­ies are unwilling to do hard physical work of up to 10 hours a day for the minimum wage. That is why the kiwifruit industry is reliant on temporary migrants and backpacker­s to cover their annual labour shortage. This is why migrant worker rules need to be eased to ensure this sad work ethic doesn’t penalise this lucrative export industry. Government welfarism is very corrosive. The kiwifruit industry received over $25 million of taxpayer money to combat the PSA virus several years ago.

The radio interviewe­r asked the kiwifruit spokesman why they don’t just pay higher wages, to attract more local workers. He replied that this would reduce the number of workers available to other kiwifruit growers in the area. They would end up competing with each other for workers. They would all end up having to pay higher wages.

The kiwifruit industry has bounced back from the PSA scare. They have innovated in developing and adopting new strains of kiwifruit that are resistant to the PSA virus. It is a great comeback story. It is a credit to their resilience and enterprise and government assistance.

A hectare of kiwifruit farm around Te Puke can sell for up to $1 million. Recent returns for orchards are between $50,000 and $100,000 per hectare. Kiwifruit is, once again, a very profitable crop. Yet growers can’t afford to pay their pickers and packers above the minimum wage. They need government assistance to increase the supply of migrant workers.

It is an interestin­g insight into how some labour markets work in New Zealand, especially for lowincome jobs. It helps explain some of the huge increase in income inequaliti­es in recent decades.

Economics 101 teaches that wage rates in most occupation­s are ultimately determined by supply and demand for workers in that occupation. It teaches that workers will tend to be paid according to their productivi­ty, due to competitio­n between firms for workers.

Classical economists from the 19th century, such as Adam Smith and David Ricardo and, unsurprisi­ngly, Karl Marx, were more dubious about how wages were determined in the real world. They believed there would always be tension between the share of business revenue that went to profit versus wages. The split between profits and wages would be largely determined by the relative bargaining power of workers compared to employers, rather than the

magical impartiali­ty of free markets and competitio­n.

Recent evidence suggests the classical economists may have been more accurate than the dogma taught to young students in Economics 101.

Some of the most profitable industries in New Zealand have paid the most miserly wages to their rankandfil­e workers. They include the big resthome operators, supermarke­ts, fast food chains, petrol companies and parts of the agricultur­e and horticultu­re sector. Wages for lowincome jobs are largely determined by the relative bargaining power of workers versus employers. Power imbalances in labour markets are the norm.

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