鈥楶roductivity鈥 weaponised to force real wage cuts on workers

June 27, 2023
Issue 
The RBA wants unemployment to go up
The RBA wants more unemployment and 'more productivity'. Graphic: 一品探花

According to the聽 nominal wages grew by聽聽over the last year. Real wages fell because inflation was running 7%. But the capitalists聽want聽workers to take an even聽bigger hit and it is weaponising聽鈥減roductivity鈥 to justify this.

Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) governor Philip Lowe said聽on 聽that wage growth should not exceed 2.5% a year unless it was matched by productivity increases.

罢丑别听聽quoted a new ANZ Bank report that states聽productivity will need to increase 鈥渁t a pace not seen in almost a decade for the current rates of wage growth to be sustainable鈥.

This comes from聽one of the big four banks, which have聽!

Workers are expected to bear the pain of sharply rising housing, and聽other living costs, supposedly to stop inflation which even the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development now聽聽have been mainly caused by corporate profiteering.

The RBA is prepared to force up unemployment through more interest rate rises to bludgeon workers into accepting a real wage cut.

RBA deputy governor Michelle Bullock told the聽Australian Industry Group聽on June 20 that聽聽to help curb inflation.

The RBA and most capitalist economists believe that an unemployment rate of at least 4.5% is required to prevent inflation (it is now at 3.5%). If unemployment was to rise to that level, this would mean making another 150,000 people jobless, as聽鈥檚 economics correspondent Peter Hannan reported.

Meanwhile, many聽聽are awarding themselves pay rises averaging out at聽15%.

At the other end of the income spectrum,聽remote聽, and other marginalised communities have only ever known poverty.

According to the聽, more than one in eight people and one in six children live below the poverty line.

The following groups faced the highest risk of poverty in 2019鈥20 and the situation has only deteriorated:

鈥 People in households聽whose main income earner is of working age but they are unemployed (62%) or not in the labour force (47%);

鈥 People in households receiving income support, including Newstart/JobSeeker (60%); Parenting Payment (72%); Youth Allowance (34%); Disability Support Pension (43%) or Carer Payment (39%);

鈥 Tenants in public housing (52%) and private rental (20% and 50% for those aged 65 years and over);

鈥 People in sole parent households (34%, and 39% among children in those households);

鈥⒙燬ingle people without children (25%,聽and 26% among those under 65 years); and

鈥 People with disability and a 鈥渃ore activity restriction鈥 (20%).

These are the people who will bear the brunt of calls on the government to 鈥渟often up鈥 the labour market by increasing unemployment.

The RBA鈥檚 talk about the need to 鈥渋ncrease productivity鈥 also means less regulation and more 鈥渇lexibility鈥 for the bosses. It is designed to make workers work harder in more precarious and unsafe workplaces.

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