New landmark agreement closes Aussie wage gap
New landmark agreement closes Aussie wage gap
New Zealand's largest private sector union says its new landmark oil & gas collective agreement providing for Australian rates of pay in New Zealand shows that real improvements in wages won't come from fiddling around with the tax system.
Under the new agreement oil rig workers’ wages will be paid in NZ dollars to all New Zealand residents who are members of the Engineering, Printing & Manufacturing Union (EPMU).
This week's Budget looks set to make tax changes that will give most workers a maximum of about $6 a week extra.
“In a week when
there will be a national discussion on tax, with one of the
Government’s selling points for the tax changes the fact
that it will leave a very small amount extra in most
people's pockets, this agreement shows that the real issue
about incomes is the level of wages,” says Andrew Little,
EPMU National Secretary.
“Fiddling around with the tax
system will never fix the problems we've got with wages,”
he says.
“This agreement was made possible by the
level of co-operation between the EPMU and Australian
unions, a highly mobile workforce and an industry with high
margins which can afford good wage levels. I expect it will
put pressure on wages elsewhere in the industry, in
Taranaki, and eventually other parts of New
Zealand”.
“This is the sort of thing that we need to
keep Kiwi workers here rather than having to head overseas
to chase better rates of pay.”
“We need to move away from the sterile debate about tax changes as a way to increase incomes and focus on the link between profitable companies and good pay rates, and that link is the wage bargaining system, not taxes or vacuous claims to productivity improvement.”
ENDS