The Forum > Article Comments > Australian industrial relations: no easy solutions > Comments
Australian industrial relations: no easy solutions : Comments
By Chris Lewis, published 15/10/2008If we can produce a better industrial relations policy stance then Australia will not need to return to a high rate of trade union membership.
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As a recently credentialled academic in Politics, preceded by a working life as a labourer and factory hand, you must surely have pondered - somewhere along the line Chris - on just why this is so.
The 'no easy answers' cop-out, results from the antithetical relations between those with enormous private wealth and power and/or the executives who manage/control their investments (these days often one-and-the-same individuals or families), and those whose labour is the only 'asset' they possess, and which produces the goods and services which most in this 'lucky country' enjoy to greater or lesser extent.
With the basic human needs of decent sustenance, housing, healthcare, education, and access to secure paid employment opportunities common to all members of both these socio-economic classes, the conflict that develops out of the employer/employee relation arises from the desire of the former to acquire and accumulate as much surplus value (profits) as possible for THEIR family in an increasingly competitive business environment.
With personal goals, objectives and values that are inimical, there can only ever be increasing conflict ('competition') between not only wealthy investors, speculators, entrepreneurs, governments, nations etc., but in particular between those whose labours actually produce the wealth of this nation and those of the employing class. With Capitalism now a global(-ised) mode of social production and distribution, this same antagonistic structure also occurs in all other 'advanced' and 'under-developed' social formations.
With Australian 'workers' sold out by the Labor Party and many of their unions several years ago now, they have become increasingly vulnerable to predatory industrial relations policies and practices by not only many of their employers, but by the two major political parties that dominate politics in this country and 'executive' officials of some major unions and their peak bodies.
As a former labourer and factory hand and now academic student of politics, it is most surprising that you appear to be completely uninformed and unaware of these realities Chris.