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HR Nicholls Lunch Time Forum How can the Labour market Help the SA Economy?. Bert Kelly Research Centre Adelaide 22 October 2014 Presenter: Malcolm Bosworth. Introduction. SA faces difficult economic challenges Industry assistance is no answer
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HR Nicholls Lunch Time Forum How can the Labour market Help the SA Economy? Bert Kelly Research Centre Adelaide 22 October 2014 Presenter: Malcolm Bosworth
Introduction • SA faces difficult economic challenges • Industry assistance is no answer • Maintaining protected industries e.g. cars has failed for both SA & the nation • SA must attract efficient industries non-reliant on protection • Shipbuilding needs to compete without depending on defence procurement preferences • Privatisation/maximum (transparent) preference margins possible reforms
Economic Framework • The plight of Club Med economies in the Eurozone provides parallels to Australia • Losing competiveness with no ER to maintain it • Higher ER in Euro than otherwise hurts exports & import-competing firms • Must undergo meaningful structural adjustment • Includes lowering real wages • Strong economies e.g. Germany gains • Lower ER than otherwise benefits exports & import-competing firms via enhanced competitiveness
Australian Situation • Single currency has similar effects • Weaker states e.g. SA, TAS higher ER than if they had their own currency • Stronger states e.g. WA, NSW have lower ER • Highlights the plight of weaker states trying to compete internationally & domestically with stronger states • Weaker states must (and be able to) economically adjust
Enabling States to Compete • Uniformity among states in many areas make sense e.g. transport BUT • In some areas its problematic & hampers weaker states from competing with stronger states & adjusting structurally to compete • especially where nationally policies reflect capacities & performances of stronger states • State competition must be healthy not distorting • Avoid competing with state subsidies, incentives etc • Recent focus by SA Government largely aspirational • marginal effects & distract from needed reforms
Policy Response • SA Government should focus on deregulation to enable businesses to better compete • Labour market key, especially minimum wages • Economic case for minimum wages weak • Trade off higher unemployment for higher wages • Any national minimum wage should be • Not too high to distort labour market • Differ across states to reflect economic conditions • initially state minimum wages
National Minimum Wages • High by international standards at $641/week • 56% of national AWEs • Junior 17 yo = 57.8% of minimum wage
National Minimum Wages • State impact varies widely due to varying AWEs • MW as % of AWE highest for TAS (66% & SA 64%) • Lowest for ACT at 45%
Policy Reform • Strong economic argument to • Reduce overall national MW as a share of AWE • Vary MWs to reflect lower AWEs in weaker states e.g. SA • Recommended by CA • Reduce real national MW until it reaches 44% of national AWE over 10 years • Lower real state MW to reach national level or, if lower, 44% of state’s AWE by 2023 • National MW estimated to be by 2023 $722 in ACT, NSW, WA & NT; $681 in VIC, $702 in QLD, $637 in SA, & $622 in TAS
Conclusion • Deregulation of labour market could play an important role in re-vitalising SA economy • Australia & states becoming a high cost economy • Reforming national MW could ease wage pressures nationally & in SA if allowed to vary between states to reflect economic conditions • Such reforms offer more sustainable potential growth opportunities than failed protection