John Menadue

MICHELLE PINI. Newstart, wage theft and big fat ducks (Independent Australia)

“Having a go"just to put food on the table? Unless you’re a well-fed restaurateur or politician, it’s unlikely that you’ll"get a go” from this Government.

The fact that George Calombaris was fined $200,000is of no consequence to hisstaff, who were jilted out of close to $8 million. Thisis a sum they are unlikely to earn in six years of full-time work and still only represents 2.5% of the outrageous sum stolen from them. But more importantly, it is of little comfort, since thefine was not paid directly to the victims of this crime.

But the Fair Work Ombudsman has also directed the celebrity chef to

‘…give public speeches educating the restaurant industry on the importance of workplace compliance.’

So that’s okay then. What’s $8 million between portly restaurateurs and politicians?

THE SWEET TASTE OF PENALTY RATES

Some time back, Calombaris attempted to butter his bread on both sides by leading the posse on the destruction of penalty rates a campaign which the Coalition Government endorsed with relish, slashing the wages of the already lowly-paid by around 15% for hospitality staff andanestimated overall cost to workers of $2.87 billion.

Coincidentally, on the same day penalty rates were cut, the Government gave its MPs a pay rise. This equates toour Prime Minister, personally, receiving an extra $11,000 per annum. Which means his increase in income is almost the same as the entire earnings of those on Newstart ($14,000). For the record, Morrisons salary is now$549,229per annum and 11 times the threshold at which HECS debts must now be paid.

It appears, however, not having to pay people to give up public holidays and Sundays, while still (usually) slugging a levy on customers for this cost of doing business, was also not enoughicing on the cake for a few others. Fellow food gurus Neil Perry, Heston Blumenthal, Shannon Bennett, Teage Ezard, Justin Hemmes and Guillaume Brahimi,have also been found to have underpaid their workers.

THE WAGE THEFT BUSINESS MODEL

It is safe to assume that there are many more instances of gross wage pilfery and these high-profile restaurateurs represent only those that have so far been investigated.

Wage theft, then, at least in the hospitality sector, is a business model and a very successful one, if Calombaris empire is anything to go by.

Even union-bashing Attorney-GeneralChristian Portermumbled something about Calombaris’ fine being“too low”. He stopped short of actually drafting legislation to make wage theft a crime, however.

And what ifthose subsisting on peanuts andworking theirguts out to help build the empires of their employers should dare to lift their malnourished faces above the bread line?

Well, for workers in the hospitality sector, who are also studying a common occurrence having theirpay rate slashed by the Government andwages stolen by the boss will also be compounded by theirHECS debt repayments,should they complete a degree.

And, since they have been gifted the right to an education and in case they should get any highfalutin ideas of, maybe, building their own empire one day, the Morrison Government has decided to collect that debt sooner.The threshold for repayments has now beenreducedby more than 11% to the princely annual income of $45,881.

What of those whodon’t manage to find work, even in the hospitality industry’s “salt mines”?

NEWSTART LUCKY DUCKS

Despite PM Scott Morrison’s claims that Australia is a world leader inwelfare policy,

… for many unemployed people, Australia not only doesnt have one of the best safety nets in the world, it has one of the worst.

This is the finding ofexpertProfessor Peter Whiteford’s analysis of the Newstart allowance.

But do we really need an expert to work out that $40 day is not enough to live on? Unless you are living as a permanent guest of others charity, this amount of money wont even cover rent, let alone electricity, heating, or a proper diet. And forget transportation it is simply notpossible to pay forpetrol,registration, insurance or maintenance if you also wish to eat.

That’s okay, though, because according to Deputy PM Michael McCormack,

"… people have to be prepared to move, sometimes, out of their comfort zone, out of their home town, and move to the next town to take a job. Newstart is not meant to be a living wage."

LET THEM EAT CAKE

And according to the PM, who has actively opposed any suggestion of an increase to the Newstart payment,

They [Newstart recipients] dont just live on Newstart alone.

Thats right! Lucky Newstart recipients also get an"energy supplement“of $4.40 a week!

This, of course, would not buy the lucky ducks dinner at Heston Blumenthal’s Fat Duck pop-up restaurant in Melbourne, where the starting cost per person (excluding wine) was $525 back in 2015. Blumenthal, incidentally, has also struggled to pay his workers according to the law.

But this extra “assistance”, in fact, doesn’t even cover the cost of a weekly Happy Meal, which is currently $5.30.

Let them eat cake, ehMr Morrison? Well, probably not cake served inany establishment of the abovementioned restaurateurs.

Newstart is below the poverty line. That is all anyone with a heart or a full stomach needs to know.

If youre just trying to “have a go” in order toput food on the table, however, dont expect to be getting a go from this Coalition Government.

Michelle Pini is executive editor at Independent Australia. You can follow her on Twitter @vmp9.

John Menadue