Another federal election looming and, of course, working people and trade unions want to see off the reactionary Coalition government in Canberra. Experience tells the union movement that we should always keep our powder dry, argues Brian Boyd.
Brian Boyd
Australian workers are doing it tough. Wage rises have dropped to their lowest level in decades: ABS figures show average full-time wages have fallen below basic cost of living needs. Casual workers have taken an even harder hit.
Itβs time to fight back and get organised. The Australian Council of Trade Unions seems to have come out of its bunker. It has called for a full blown βChange the Rulesβ campaign to win back our βrights at workβ, lost progressively since 1996.
Superannuation should provide a comfortable retirement for the several million workers who signed up to the 1983β95 βsuperannuation revolutionβ by the ACTU and Hawke-Keating Labor governments. But what should be in a super account to provide a comfortable retirement for this βpioneerβ generation?
The historical and current injustices following the establishment of industry superannuation and the subsequent undermining of this important social policy initiative needs to be scrutinised.