鈥楺antasKeeper鈥 tourism package another big business hand-out

March 19, 2021
Issue 
Photo: John_Flickr_CC_BY_SA_2.0

The Aviation Tourism package, a replacement for the JobKeeper wage subsidy for the aviation industry, comes with no obligations to protect jobs, warned the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU). It was announced by the federal government on March 11.聽

About 9000 Qantas employees and 1000 Virgin employees remain stood down from work due to depressed travel demand, with most international pilots and crew not expected to have any meaningful work until at least October.

Qantas sacked 8500 ground staff last November, despite claiming $726 million in JobKeeper payments and collected 鈥$1.2 billion in direct payments, waived charges and underwritten flights over 2020鈥, Matt Elmas reported in the March 13 .

The ACTU and aviation unions have called on the federal government to introduce its own 鈥淎viationKeeper鈥 package, which would ensure jobs are secured, implement strict salary caps on executives, ban bonuses and dividends and ban the outsourcing of jobs overseas.

鈥淭he Morrison government has returned to trickle-down economics, where there are no protections or guarantees for jobs 鈥 just hope employers will do the right thing,鈥 ACTU secretary Sally McManus said.

鈥淭his package will just line the pockets of employers, who鈥檝e proven that they can鈥檛 be trusted to use taxpayers鈥 money to support their employees,鈥 she added.

Qantas CEO Alan Joyce is understandably pleased as punch about the government鈥檚 aviation tourism deal.

About 800,000 Qantas, Jetstar and Virgin tickets to selected tourist destinations will be subsidised so they can be sold at half price. This $1.2 billion federal subsidy will run from April to July.

Small tourist operators have also criticised the government鈥檚 plans, warning that another 300,000 jobs could be lost from the sector 鈥 on top of the 500,000 full-time positions already gone due to COVID-19 鈥 if JobKeeper is not extended beyond March.

The Australian Tourism Industry Council, which represents smaller tourism and accommodation providers, said the package does nothing to support jobs in the capital city gateways, which are crucial to the sector.

Moreover, in a repeat of the infamous Sports Rorts affair of 2019, the aviation tourism package blatantly targets its handouts to marginal Coalition and Labor seats.

Labor leader Anthony Albanese said the government 鈥渁lways looks at the electoral map鈥 when allocating grants and economic support. He noted the two marginal seats in northern Tasmania would be supported, but not southern Tasmania.

鈥淚n the Northern Territory, Darwin gets nothing, but of course Alice Springs and Uluru in the seat of Lingiari, gets support,鈥 he said.

鈥淚f you are in Cairns, the marginal seat Leichhardt is included in the package, but if you are in Gladstone or some other areas of Queensland that also rely on tourism, then you get excluded as well.鈥

He the package as a 鈥渟elective aviation package鈥 that does nothing for tourism operators.

In fact, the package is just another generous subsidy to big business. In particular, it is a massive handout to rapacious corporate giants so it would be better called 鈥淨antasKeeper鈥.

一品探花 has campaigned tirelessly to expose Australia鈥檚 corrupt system of government on behalf of big corporations against the interests of working people. If you would like to help expose these corporate rorts, please become a Green Left supporter and make a donation to our 2021 Fighting Fund. In this way, you can also help to recognise our .

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