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Party politics lost in unemployment : Comments
By Ben Rees, published 1/9/2014Post 1971, the moral question in economics has been abandoned. Individual interest has been the driver of economic policy to achieve growth, income and employment.
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On the contrary, self-interest policies have delivered enormous wealth and increasing amounts of freedom and choice. During the last eight years alone, adjusted per capita GDP in Australia has risen by around $400 per annum.
There is nothing sacred about employment. Most of us already work a good deal less hard than our parents of grandparents did, and although time at work is increasing, the circumstances under which we work are generally far more pleasant than they were in the past. Part-time and casual work is much more common, and plenty of Australians have discovered they don't need full time employment to secure the kinds of lives they want to lead. The average number of years in healthy retirement is increasing and the number of years spent in school before starting employment is also rising.
The main reason people are unemployed is because manual labour is no longer widely used, and many of them don't have the skills to do anything else. We can retrain some of them, but others will never be able to do a job which will earn them the minimum wage. If it's important for these people to work, then their work will have to be subsidised by the taxpayer; we will, in effect, be paying people to waste their time doing useless things.