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Deepening cuts to jobs and wages in Australia intensify political crisis

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Deepening cuts to jobs and wages in Australia intensify political crisis

New data showing rising unemployment and a steep fall in workers’ real wages expose the fraud of the Albanese Labor government’s claims to be alleviating the cost-of-living crisis, as well as its 2022 election pledge of a “better future.”

New Reserve Bank of Australia governor Michelle Bullock with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (left) and Australian Treasurer Jim Chalmers July 14, 2023. [Photo: Anthony Albanese Facebook]

These developments, on top of Labor’s support for the US-armed Israeli genocide in Gaza and US militarism against Russia and China, are intensifying the discrediting of the federal and state Labor governments in workers’ eyes.

According to the latest Australian Financial Review/Freshwater Strategy poll, published today, primary voting support for the Labor government has continued to fall to 31 percent, nearly 2 percentage points below Labor’s vote in the 2022 election.

If an election were held today, Labor would be reduced to a minority government, depending on the backing of not just the Greens but various independents. If the trend continues, with a federal election due before May, the widely-reviled Liberal-National Coalition could even form a minority government.

Either way, the result would be a hung parliament and an unstable government under conditions of a worsening economic situation and mounting global war tensions.

Official, vastly understated, unemployment figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) last week showed the jobless rate, seasonally adjusted, rose from 4 percent to 4.1 percent in June, as part of a rising trend.

By this measure, from May to June, unemployment rose by 9,700, and 95,800 over the year to June. That means an 18.7 percent increase in just a year, taking total number of unemployed workers actively seeking jobs, according to the strict ABS criteria, up to 608,200.

When Labor narrowly scraped into office in May 2022, the official ABS jobless rate was 3.95 percent. By the government’s own budget estimates, this rate will reach 4.5 percent by next year, throwing tens of thousands more workers out of jobs.

The ABS estimate of “underutilisation,” which includes underemployment—workers looking for more hours of work—has risen to 10.6 percent, or more than 900,000 workers—from 9.5 percent in February 2023.

These figures disguise the impact on self-employed workers or small contractors, particularly those affected by widespread cuts and insolvencies in the construction and mining industries, in which many thousands of jobs have gone since the start of 2024.

Nevertheless, even the ABS data makes a mockery of Treasurer Jim Chalmers’s claim, in response to the statistics, that the Labor government “has ­created more jobs in a parliamentary term than any government in history.”

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