Speech to the Sydney Institute
Part I: Acknowledgements
- Good evening.
- I acknowledge the Gadigal people as the traditional custodians of the land we are meeting on.
- I pay my respects to their elders, past and present.
- Thank you to Anne and Gerard for the invitation to speak at the Sydney Institute.
- Gerard, your IR Club essay encouraged us to question our workplace relations systems.
- And we should absolutely always be questioning: have we got it right?
- Because fundamentally, workplace relations is about fairness and the kind of society we want to live in.
- Tonight I want to talk about how we can move past the notion of workplace relations as just a zero-sum game where only workers or employers can succeed.
- I want to talk about some of the outcomes we are seeing as a result of the Albanese Labor Government’s workplace relations reforms.
- And I want to highlight how these outcomes are actually facilitating cooperative workplace arrangements, which can deliver mutual benefits.
Part II: Labour – not just another economic commodity
- But before we get to the work place – I’d like to talk a little about work itself.
- It delivers obvious economic benefits.
- A decent pay cheque pays the bills.
- It lets people plan for their future.
- It means you can work to live – not live to work.
- But work can – and should – also fulfill some of our deepest psychological needs.
- Accomplishment, community, connection.
- Work is intrinsically tied to us as human beings.
- So as a workplace input, a worker is not separable from their labour.
- Labour is more than just another cost of production or a cog in a machine.
- In 1911, Frederick Taylor famously argued that:
- “In the past, the man has been first. In the future, the system must be first.”
- But we know better now.
- We understand that the engagement of workers is key to boosting discretionary effort.
- Things like problem-solving, adaptability and collaboration.
- And engagement is shaped by incentives.
- Incentives like job security, agency and remuneration.
- Companies that recognise this fact can derive a real profit advantage.
- Because a company’s workforce is its competitive edge.
- Now you might think I would say that, as a Labor Member of Parliament.
- But the research backs it up.
- A recent meta-analysis conducted by Gallup, covering over 3.3 million employees globally, found that businesses with highly engaged workers had 23% higher profits than those with low engagement.
- So the way a company engages its workers has a direct effect on business success.
- But I also believe that treating workers fairly is fundamental to a strong, competitive economy.
- And that is why Government has a role in regulating the workplace.
- Of course, our interest in the workplace goes beyond just economic impacts.
- Because Government also has a role in shaping our society.
- People’s working conditions have a real impact on their social circumstances.
- How secure they feel.
- How fairly they are treated.
- How confident they can be about the future.
- And that was front of mind for our Government when we delivered our significant reform agenda in the last Parliament.
- During that process, there was some criticism we had gone too far, in favour of workers and unions.
- But that criticism overlooks the fact these reforms are delivering benefits for business, too.
Part III: Rejecting the ‘pendulum’
- And this is why the common cliché of the workplace relations pendulum is too simplistic.
- Many of you will have heard it before.
- The pendulum metaphor relies on the idea that if workers win, then employers lose – and vice versa.
- It gets a run in The Australian or the AFR at least once a month.
- Former Qantas chief Alan Joyce publicly rehashed this idea just in November last year:
- “The pendulum of industrial relations can go too far one way – or too far another way.”
- Mr Joyce also said:
- “The pendulum, for some time, has been in the wrong spot.”
- But the pendulum metaphor is limiting.
- It pushes people into their respective corners.
- And this mindset can have real consequences.
- As we saw at Qantas under Mr Joyce, who oversaw an approach to workplace relations that the Federal Court described as ‘combative.’
- An internal review, reported in the AFR, said that this adversarial approach did ‘considerable harm’ to the airline’s relationship with its staff and stakeholders, along with its reputation.
- That’s why the pendulum idea is damaging: it precludes the ability to see workers and their unions as partners, rather than adversaries.
- Now, my glasses are not rose-tinted.
- I’m not going to pretend that the interests of employers and workers are always aligned.
- Nor am I suggesting that government can eliminate disagreement through legislation.
- But rejecting the pendulum does not mean denying differences.
- It means recognising that there are also often opportunities for cooperation.
- Because cooperative workplaces are productive workplaces.
- Productivity is not something done to workers.
- It is something achieved with workers.
- Cooperation builds trust – and research shows that trust substantially boosts an organisation’s performance and employee engagement.
- Which, as I have already highlighted, delivers higher profits for business.
- But trust can’t rely on goodwill alone.
- It needs mechanisms that facilitate real cooperation.
- And unions are a legitimate part of that.
- Our Government’s workplace relations reforms did clearly demarcate a role for unions in the workplace.
- For example, we better defined the role of a union delegate and put specific rights for them into law.
- Because a common understanding of the ground rules makes it easier to work together – and build trust.
- And when a relationship is based on trust – between unions and employers – neither side needs to see each other as a threat.
- I know that not everyone in this room will agree with me on this point.
- But international evidence shows this type of cooperation can actually reduce conflict.
- In Denmark for example, the relationship between employers and workers is far less conflict-based than in Australia.
- In 2024, Denmark lost just 1.5 working days per 1,000 employees to industrial disputes.
- That's compared to 10.5 days for Australia.
- This is in a country with almost 70% union density.
- One study showed that 77% of Danish employers thought that union delegates were important for developing their organisation.
- And 89% believed their relationship with union delegates was based on a high degree of trust.
- So cooperation cuts down conflict.
- And it can even lead to practical innovation – like in the Danish model, where employers and unions jointly manage the skills and training system.
- So when we stop thinking in terms of a pendulum, we can see real opportunities for everyone to benefit.
Part IV: Better Pay
- When the Albanese Government introduced our first term reforms, people quickly reverted to the familiar pendulum metaphor.
- People said our laws were too pro-worker, at the expense of business.
- Now, I will not apologise for recognising workers benefit from higher wages and better job security.
- But our reforms provide opportunities for business to benefit, too.
- When we came to office, enterprise bargaining had declined to historic lows.
- The rules were so broken that the normal 12-week timeframe for approving agreements had dragged out to 12 months.
- As a result, employers defaulted to awards – meaning they couldn’t negotiate bespoke conditions for their enterprise.
- Workers, meanwhile, missed out on meaningful real wage growth for the better part of a decade.
- Each one percentage point loss of bargaining coverage has been associated with a reduction in annual wage growth of 0.15 percentage points.
- Getting wages moving again was a clear priority for our Government.
- Because wages are a critical element of that economic freedom I spoke about earlier.
- But one of the ways we wanted to deliver these wage increases was by reinvigorating enterprise bargaining.
- Because enterprise bargaining delivers more than just higher wages for workers.
- It delivers for employers too.
- Companies can have agency in the process of negotiating reasonable wage increases.
- And they can tie wage growth to greater productivity enhancements.
- Research from the RBA shows the relationship between wages and company productivity is much weaker when firms rely on industry awards.
- And I’d like to stress this point: our bargaining reforms do not mandate wage increases.
- They enable negotiation.
- And where productivity improvements are available, enterprise bargaining allows those gains to be shared.
- So I’m proud that our reforms were focused on promoting bargaining.
- Reforms like: simplifying the Better Off Overall Test.
- Streamlining the agreement approval process.
- And making it easier to restart or initiate the bargaining process.
- Those changes are facilitating beneficial outcomes for workers and their employers.
- Let me give you an example.
- In 2020, Bunnings had to abandon the process of negotiating a new agreement because it had simply taken too long.
- After our reforms, they were able to restart bargaining for their expired agreement, and get it approved in a timely manner.
- Bunnings and the SDA have now negotiated a landmark agreement that benefits workers through decent wage rises and flexible work provisions.
- But it also benefits Bunnings by positioning them as a preferred employer in a tight labour market.
- Their chief people officer, Damian Zahra, said that:
- “We want to attract and retain a high-performing team by providing industry-leading benefits and a great culture – and the new agreement plays an important role in doing that.”
- And the numbers show that they are not alone.
- We are seeing an uptick in enterprise bargaining across the country.
- Since we came to office, the number of employees covered by a collective agreement has increased by more than 50%.
- Our reforms also provided more options for employers, workers and their unions to make multi-employer agreements.
- I know that there was some criticism of these changes.
- But can I be very clear: we didn’t create a new system.
- Our reforms simply updated the existing multi-employer pathways to make them more workable.
- Supported bargaining for low-paid workers, for example, is not a new invention – but the barrier to entry was just too high.
- Like in the childcare sector, where many small businesses simply didn’t have the resources to bargain.
- We changed the rules to make it easier for these businesses, their workers and unions to come together.
- Coming together allows resources to be shared – and mutual gains to be realised.
- Workers are now seeing better pay and conditions.
- And employers are seeing direct benefits through better staff retention, allowing them to offer high-quality services.
- I know some employers were resistant to the single-interest stream of multi-employer bargaining.
- But our Government saw it as an important mechanism to avoid a race to the bottom on wages and conditions.
- Of course, if an employer has an existing enterprise agreement, they will not be captured by a multi-employer one.
- And despite some of the hyperbole we saw at the time, pattern bargaining remains unlawful under the Fair Work Act.
- Our Government also made it easier to access the cooperative stream for voluntary multi-employer bargaining, creating a genuine opportunity for businesses and workers to achieve mutual gains.
- I’d urge any business owner – especially smaller operators without the resources to bargain alone – to consider this pathway and the shared benefits enterprise bargaining can deliver.
- The reason I am so passionate about bargaining is not just the outcomes.
- It’s because the process itself delivers benefits.
- It fosters consultation, communication, cooperation.
- It gets parties together around the table, understanding each other’s perspectives – including points of difference.
- Which, as I have already outlined, is important for building trust.
Part V: Secure Jobs
- Having job security is critical to a worker’s economic and emotional wellbeing.
- That’s why our Government passed reforms to promote job security, like Same Job Same Pay and a simpler pathway to permanency for casuals who want it.
- There was some criticism from business about these reforms as well.
- But I strongly believe these reforms will also deliver mutual gains in the long run.
- Our Government knows flexibility is important for productivity and to meet industry needs.
- But like I said at the beginning: workers are not robots.
- Having security in a job ensures that people are engaged.
- It ensures they will invest effort into their work.
- And this is backed up by research.
- A recent meta-analysis from the Chartered Institute of Personnel Development found that job security has the single strongest positive correlation to employee commitment.
- Engaged employees, as I’ve said, deliver better profits.
- But secure jobs are also important for broader economic growth.
- They allow workers to invest in themselves, their families, their future.
- That is why our Government is unashamedly supportive of encouraging permanent, direct employment.
- Labour hire can, of course, be an efficient tool where it meets genuine short-term or specialist needs.
- But when it undercuts wages for identical work, it distorts competition and erodes trust.
- Because the relative deprivation of doing the same job as your colleague, but getting paid less, is incredibly demoralising.
- Last year, I met Alanna, a flight attendant who is one of the thousands of workers who have benefited from our Same Job, Same Pay reforms.
- She is finally getting paid the same as her colleagues, after more than a decade of working under different pay scales.
- Alanna said:
- “We have seen significant morale improvements amongst the crew working together in the same cabin.”
- Alanna’s story shows that where our laws deliver benefits to workers through better job security, employers also benefit through a more engaged and committed workforce.
Part VI: Right to Disconnect
- Another reform that was perceived to just be on the side of workers, but is actually also good for business, is the Right to Disconnect.
- When we passed this law, there was a lot of commentary that only viewed this reform through the lens of the pendulum metaphor.
- Critics said it was overly prescriptive and would exclusively benefit workers.
- And yes, our law does give workers the legal certainty to refuse unreasonable contact outside of business hours.
- They can properly clock off, spend time with their families and reset their work-life balance.
- But last year, the Australian HR Institute surveyed over 600 senior business decision-makers about the Right to Disconnect.
- And the results may be surprising to our critics.
- More than half of those business figures said the right to disconnect had improved employee engagement and productivity at their organisation.
- Now of course, a survey is not quite a randomised control trial.
- But it does indicate that both workers and employers actually needed the clarity that our laws provided.
- It has helped create a common understanding in workplaces about the important issue of work/life balance – which reduces the likelihood of conflict.
- And despite the dire predictions of some, we have not seen big disagreements in the Fair Work Commission about this measure.
- This just shows that the pendulum metaphor narrows our view – and stops us from appreciating the mutual benefits that can be achieved through reform.
Part VII: Tripartism
- As I have outlined, real mutual gains can be realised by employers and workers and their unions working together and having constructive dialogue.
- But there is an important role for government as well.
- As Minister, I am committed to embedding a tripartite approach wherever possible.
- Because I truly believe in the ability of tripartism to deliver better decision-making through shared understanding and trust.
- Safe Work Australia is a clear example of this.
- Its tripartite structure is widely recognised as a strength, including by business groups and unions.
- They can have confidence that they are making a real contribution to the development of model laws for safe, healthy workplaces.
- The National Construction Industry Forum is another example.
- For the first time, we have stakeholders engaging in a collaborative way to address systemic problems in the sector.
- Some critics have said that tripartism slows decision-making or gives undue influence to vested interests.
- But reforms imposed without stakeholder buy-in tend to be short-lived.
- Whatever your feelings about unions or businesses, cutting them out of the picture simply does not work.
- Because in my view, exclusion breeds antagonism.
- Tripartism does not require decisions to be unanimous.
- Let me assure you – when I attend these forums, we are not sitting around the table, singing Kumbayah.
- We are having – at times – pretty frank conversations.
- But this process does increase stakeholder confidence in decisions by ensuring their concerns are ventilated.
- That is why I will continue to foster tripartism in our institutions.
- Not just as window dressing – but for meaningful decision-making.
- For example, at the Fair Work Commission, I am committed to making balanced appointments to ensure employer and employee perspectives are recognised, along with legal expertise.
- And our Jobs and Skills Councils are embedding a tripartite approach in the skills sector to shape Australia’s future workforce.
- As I said earlier, I know there will often be contestability.
- But understanding each other’s perspectives allows us to understand what we are actually disagreeing about.
- The many business leaders and unions I have engaged with in this portfolio have demonstrated a willingness to lean in through these forums.
- They recognise it is better for everyone when we can work together.
Part VIII: AI as example of post-pendulum
- Artificial intelligence will be the next test case of our capacity to work together.
- We all know AI will change the types of jobs people do.
- But it won’t just affect what people do.
- It will also reshape how they’re managed and treated at work.
- And AI can’t make those human judgements about fairness or dignity in the workplace on its own.
- That’s why trust and transparency matter so much.
- And it’s why involving workers and unions in decisions about how AI is introduced is absolutely critical.
- We can’t afford to treat AI in the workplace as another zero-sum game where if employers win, then workers lose.
- Research from Jobs and Skills Australia shows that businesses get the best return on AI when they involve their workers.
- And in this new age of AI, workers can’t be treated as disposable.
- Employers need to invest in their people’s skills and show that there is a secure, valued place for them in the future.
- Because workers need confidence that they are not just training their own replacement, but are contributing to the business’s ongoing success.
- And it’s the workers – with their knowledge and understanding of the business – who are essential to making sure the technology can deliver real value.
- A core pillar of our Government’s National AI Plan is making sure that we are seizing the opportunity and sharing the benefits.
- My job as Minister is to examine our current workplace frameworks and legislation, to make sure they are fit for purpose for the expansion of AI in the workplace.
- And if there are gaps, then I will progress appropriate reforms to ensure we continue to have fair, safe and cooperative workplaces.
- Employers, workers and government all have to work together to ensure we avoid the obvious pitfalls.
- One of the ways I’m doing this is through the tripartite AI Working Group – bringing parties together around the same table to work through the risks and develop shared solutions.
- And we’re already seeing businesses and unions embrace this cooperative approach.
- For example, last month Microsoft and the ACTU signed an MoU to establish a framework around AI in the workplace.
- In their statement, Microsoft specifically emphasised the importance of workers’ voices in the successful implementation of technology.
- It’s just another example of what is possible when parties focus on what can be achieved together through trust and cooperation.
Part IX: Broader Social Benefits
- Because if we don’t have trust at the workplace level – there can be broader social implications.
- When people see systems as unfair, they withdraw trust.
- Not just from employers, but from institutions more broadly.
- Findings from Australian Barometer public surveys show that when people perceive income inequality to be high, then they are less satisfied with democracy.
- And a study across 18 European countries found that job insecurity generates lower levels of trust in political institutions.
- So ensuring sustainable wage growth is important – but not enough on its own.
- Australia has a proud history of minimum workplace standards to ensure we do not let people fall through the cracks and maintain their trust in the system.
- That tradition underpinned our reforms for gig workers.
- A failure of adequate regulation meant gig workers were locked out of a basic level of remuneration and protections that other working Australians enjoy.
- When we listened to business, workers and unions – it was clear that the answer was not to force them into a traditional model of direct employment.
- But we did need to ensure these workers had minimum remuneration and protections.
- Because a society in which people work hard, but can’t achieve a basic level of economic security, is not just bad for that individual’s living standards.
- It will lead to an erosion of faith in our democratic institutions.
- A strong safety net rewards people’s faith in the system.
- And ultimately – faith in democracy.
Part X: Conclusion
- In conclusion, I believe that we have an opportunity to think more broadly about how our workplace relations system can deliver benefits for employers and workers.
- We cannot let the narrow pendulum metaphor dictate our approach to workplace relations.
- There will always be different priorities between the interests of capital and labour.
- But there are real, significant opportunities to find mutual gains.
- As Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations, I never forget the privilege and responsibility I have.
- The institutions and policies I steward play a major role in shaping how people experience the world of work – and their broader social circumstances.
- That’s why cooperation, trust and shared prosperity will remain my priorities.
- Because that will deliver economic gains and higher living standards for all Australians.
And because that will create a world of work where Australians can succeed together, not at each other’s expense.