Higher wages will not fuel inflation, Tony Burke says

The employment minister says rising pay rates won't fuel inflation, after minimum wage earners were awarded a 5.2 per cent increase.

Employment Minister Tony Burke

Employment Minister Tony Burke says pay rates have suffered a decade of stagnation. Source: AAP / LUKAS COCH

Employment Minister Tony Burke does not believe wages growth is about to further fuel inflation, saying pay rates have suffered a decade of stagnation.

Last week the Fair Work Commission endorsed a for low-paid workers, roughly in line with the current rate of inflation, although the .

"Inflation is not being driven by high wage growth," Mr Burke told Sky News' Sunday Agenda program.

"We don't have high wage growth. The wage price index has been running at 2.4 (per cent) at the same time that inflation was coming in at 5.1 (per cent)."
He said some of the drivers of inflation are international, some of them are from previous government neglect.

Mr Burke also confirmed the previous government's revamped Job Active plan will go ahead from 1 July as planned, although Labor intends to make changes to the new points-based system.

He wants the automated messages telling people they might be going to lose their benefits stopped, saying it is a reminder of the controversial but now defunct Robodebt scheme.

"I'd like to stop them, reframe them," he said.

"The other thing is the system (is) not just complex, but there's some anomalies in what they've done that I find really weird."
He said someone doing a full-time course to get job ready won't get sufficient points under the system, so they are still having to apply for other jobs and if they get an interview, they might not finish the course.

"What the (previous) government's designed, some of it's more punitive than actually getting the job done," Mr Burke said.

The Labor government is expected to hold a jobs summit in late September or early October to bring government, business and unions together.

"I want to get wages moving and enterprise bargaining has been the best way of doing that hand-in-hand with productivity," Mr Burke said.

"Wage stagnation happened when we were told we couldn't have wage improvements because inflation was low, now some people are arguing we can't have wage improvements because inflation is high."
Asked if pensions and the JobSeeker payment, will be increased in line with inflation like the minimum wage, Mr Burke said these will assessed in the October budget.

"We said during the campaign all of those benefit payments get reassessed for what's affordable every budget," he said.

Shadow treasurer Angus Taylor warned interest rate pressures are very significant right now.

"The question is what is the government going to do to alleviate that," he told Sky News.
"They need to make sure they are doing everything in their power in their economic management polices to bring downward pressure on interest rates."

He declined to say whether Australia faces a recession as is feared to be happening in the US.

"(Treasurer) Jim Chalmers has promised there is not going to be one, I hope he is right," Mr Taylor said.

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3 min read
Published 19 June 2022 11:43am
Updated 19 June 2022 12:04pm
Source: AAP


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