For 2015 the
Fair Work Commission has decided to increase Australia’s minimum wages by 2.5
per cent. This is the lowest annual increase in minimum wages since no increase
was given in 2009. The Australian Council of Trade Unions’ Secretary, Dave
Oliver, said that the decision would widen the gap
between the minimum wage and average wages.
It does at
first glance look like a low increase. In justifying the level of the increase
the Fair Work Commission note that the most significant developments
since 2014 have been the reduction in inflation and low aggregate wages growth. Consumer price inflation over the
year to the March quarter 2015 has been 1.3 per cent. Underlying consumer price
inflation – which better measures the ‘trend’ increase in prices – is somewhat
higher, at a bit below 2½ per cent. Even so the 2.5 per cent increase in
minimum wages looks enough to cover, on average, the increases in prices faced
by low-paid workers.
Nor do the
ACTU’s fears about minimum wages lagging further behind average wages seem to
hold. The Wage Price Index increased by a very low 2.3 per cent over the year
to the March quarter 2015, while the more volatile average weekly (ordinary
time) earnings for full-time employees measure increased by 2.8 per cent over
2014. An increase of 2.5 per cent, while slightly lower than the latter
measure, is not that far off, and allowed the Commission to give a ‘round’
increase of $16 per week to the standard minimum wage.
Given that
minimum wages are only adjusted once a year, there is some uncertainty about
whether the Commission should consider changes in prices and wages over the
past year or over the next year. Oliver’s point may be stronger if inflation
and wage growth are forecast to be higher in 2015-16. According to the most
recent Budget papers though, the Australian Treasury forecasts inflation and
the increase in the Wage Price Index to be 2½ per cent in 2015-16. Hence,
looking forward does not substantially strengthen the ACTU argument. The Fair
Work Commission itself prefers
actual data to forecasts [para. 9 of the Decision].
Low inflation and wage growth aside, an argument
could be made for a higher increase in wages for low-paid employees if their incomes
and living standards were lagging behind the rest of society, and/or they were
experiencing particularly acute financial stress. None of those things look to
be particularly the case [paras. 404-417]. Therefore, while at first glance the
Commission’s increase this year looks to be somewhat miserly, on closer inspection
it seems broadly consistent with what is going on in the rest of a rather weak
Australian economy.
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