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Employer matters in 2005

journal contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00 authored by Bruce Hearn Mackinnon
By any reckoning, the year 2005 will long be remembered as a watershed year for Australian industrial relations. While there were the usual types of industrial disputes, on-going enterprise bargaining and another round of arguments over the Australian Industrial Relations Commission’s (AIRC’s) annual safety-net review, the year was dominated by the looming re-writing of Australia’s industrial relations regulatory regime, made possible by the Government’s surprise majority in the Senate, granted to them in late 2004. Viewed as a looming dark cloud by some or a shining light by others, most of 2005 was spent in anxious anticipation of the Howard government’s impending ‘WorkChoices’ legislation. Employer groups spent much of the year lobbying the Howard government for the types of reforms long cherished, but only dreamed of by employers, for arguably 100 years. A once in a lifetime opportunity had presented itself and employer groups were determined to take full advantage of the situation, by ensuring that the government did not lose its nerve. Perhaps more importantly, however, in addition to lobbying the government, major employer organizations devoted significant resources to building the case for industrial relations reform and attempting to sell that message to the electorate. By year’s end, employers had succeeded in the first objective, but had seemingly failed in the second.

History

Journal

Journal of industrial relations

Volume

48

Issue

3

Pagination

385 - 399

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Location

London, England

ISSN

0022-1856

eISSN

1472-9296

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, Industrial Relations Society of Australia