Rotorua Daily Post

Drop sledgehamm­er, Govt urged

Bosses’ lobby group Businessnz ramps up campaign seeking the scrapping of Fair Pay Agreements legislatio­n

- Thomas Coughlan

Pro-business lobby group Businessnz is today launching a campaign to stop the Government implementi­ng Fair Pay Agreements (FPAS). Businessnz published an open letter in the Herald to Minister for Workplace Relations and Safety Michael Wood, calling on people to join the campaign against the agreements.

Businessnz CEO Kirk Hope said the campaign was “urging the Government to start listening to the genuine concerns of employers and employees across the country about the negative effects FPAS will have on the way we work”.

“At their heart FPAS are about compulsion and mean New Zealand employees and their employers lose control over the way they work and their right to negotiate their own employment conditions. That’s not fair,” Hope said.

An FPA is a sector-wide award that sets minimum standards, including wages and conditions.

Under the plan, unions can begin an FPA negotiatio­n if they get support from 1000 workers who would be covered by the agreement, 10 per cent of a workforce, or meet a public interest test.

People do not need to be union members to count towards those tests, nor need join a union to be covered by an FPA.

The Government disputes the idea the agreements are compulsory for workers because employees are not required to join a union. However, the agreements are compulsory for employers, who must abide by the minimum standards they create.

“FPAS will take away control from Kiwi workers and give it to faceless officials in Wellington who will decide

how you work, when you work and how much you will get paid — without any idea who you are and without your consent,” Hope said.

“This campaign is about standing up for Kiwi workers’, and their employers’, right to choose how they work.

“We don’t think it’s okay for your right to negotiate your working conditions with your employer to be stripped away because a small percentage of workers in your industry think it’s the right thing to do.”

Legislatio­n that will provide for the agreements has had a rocky road. Labour tried to get the agreements over the line in the previous Parliament but was stymied by NZ First.

Wood produced a bill this year, introducin­g it to Parliament last month. It is now in select committee.

Introducin­g the bill, Wood said FPAS were similar to a system in Australia. He said this system had helped to lift Australian wages.

“Australia has had a sector-based bargaining system . . . for over 40 years, contributi­ng to higher wages and contributi­ng to an economy where average annual labour productivi­ty growth has been 46 per cent higher than New Zealand’s since 1991 when we abolished sector-based bargaining — the argument that FPAS and sector-based bargaining are contrary to productivi­ty growth are false,” Wood said.

Hope said the Government should look for other ways of lifting wages.

“A far better option is to identify sectors that are facing wage challenges and develop a targeted solution . . . We don’t need a one-sizefits-all, bureaucrat­ic, sledgehamm­er solution across all sectors.

“Our request to the Government is simple: listen to employers and employees, scrap compulsory FPA legislatio­n and do what your own officials have recommende­d — improve and strengthen the current system,” he said.

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Michael Woods.
Photo / NZME Michael Woods.

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