on โ09-01-2015 04:25 PM
....a new record high yes, 20.6% of Australia's Workforce unemployed and underemployed
http://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2015/01/roy-morgan-unemployment-at-record-high/
........while employers and the Abbott Government push for easier visas for overseas workers
Solved! Go to Solution.
on โ09-01-2015 08:55 PM
on โ12-01-2015 12:22 PM
Come on Paints, the LyingNP Govt are working tirelessly to increase the number of unemployed.....what was the question again?
on โ12-01-2015 12:52 PM
What is laughable is how Tony Abbott is apparently unaware that NZ is in RECESSION! ......LOL
on โ09-01-2015 05:11 PM
What steps have the current Govt taken to alleviate this problem?
(apart from proposed measures re cuts in benefits, changes in eligibility etc, in the Budget which are unfair and will FAIL to get passed).
on โ09-01-2015 05:26 PM
on โ09-01-2015 08:23 PM
RECORD 20.6% Unemployed/Under-Employed in Australia
What rubbish. We're still riding high on Wayne's promise.
THE Australian economy will create another 500,000 new jobs during the next two years, Treasurer Wayne Swan says.
It's all beer and skittles.
โ09-01-2015 08:27 PM - edited โ09-01-2015 08:27 PM
rhubarb
on โ09-01-2015 08:27 PM
and custard
on โ09-01-2015 08:28 PM
with cream on top
on โ09-01-2015 08:55 PM
on โ12-01-2015 10:10 AM
The single most important thing a government can do is to ensure its workforce is fully engaged. Yet, this government is happy to use unemployment as a tool to achieve its neo liberal economic policies that, when implemented, are counter-productive to full employment.
Worse still, the government seems to be on a mission to demonise the unemployed. With a compliant media they are happy to depict them as lazy, as dole bludgers, as people who refuse to develop work skills, who lack appropriate qualifications, who are unwilling to travel to find work.
A compliant media (knowingly or unknowingly) are enjoined to use a type of language that demeans an unemployed person, that blames the victim rather than addressing the reasons behind retrenchments. The governmentโs approach to the unemployed in the May budget underscores their contempt for those who cannot find a job. They blame the individual rather than address systemic failures.
Comments from politicians and their obsequious media stooges such as, โthere are plenty of jobs out there for those willing to lookโ, only serve to validate a contempt that masks something far worse: a deliberate plan to maintain a level of unemployment consistent with their plan to stifle wage increases and improve the profits of those their policies are designed to favour.
The proof of this is easy to see.
1) There are approximately 770, 000 persons unemployed and only about 150,000 vacancies advertised.
2) There has been a massive increase of 457 visaโs that bring in overseas workers to fill positions that the unemployed could satisfy.
3) There are currently no direct local job creation programs in play.
4) The combined underutilisation of the workforce is 15% which represents billions of dollars in lost gross domestic product.
The government is doing nothing to address this travesty.
This is a betrayal of our countryโs human resources and the media are co-conspirators..............
on โ12-01-2015 11:09 AM
Neo-liberalism has also changed the way we think about unemployment. In the past we understood clearly that it arose as a result of a shortage of jobs. In recent decades, we have been conditioned by a relentless (lying) press and government statements to perceive unemployment as an individual problem.
So the unemployed are lazy; have poor work attitudes; refuse to invest in appropriate skills; are subject to disincentives arising from misguided government welfare support, and all the rest of the arguments that mainstream uses to obfuscate the social problem. In Australia, this sort of โblame the victimโ approach was accompanied by a new nomenclature that entered our daily public discourse and was promoted by government ministers including successive prime ministers.
We were told that the unemployed were bludgers, job snobs, cruisers and worse. Television current affairs programs targetted unemployed families and lured them into looking as though they didnโt want to work.
All of this despite the overwhelming evidence from studies in most countries that the unemployed were highly motivated to find work and were victims of a shortage of jobs.