It's really about permanent insecurity
- Written by David Peetz, Professor of Employment Relations, Centre for Work, Organisation and Wellbeing, Griffith University
The federal government’s industrial relations “reform” bill offers a new definition of “casual” employment that creates more problems than it solves.
It effectively defines a casual job as anything described that way by the employer at the time a job commences, so long as the employer initially makes “no firm advance commitment to continuing and indefinite work”.
Anyone defined as such loses any entitlement to leave they might otherwise have got through two[1] recent[2] Federal Court decisions.
Fair enough, you might think. Casual jobs are meant to be flexible. There can’t be an ongoing commitment.
But that’s not what the data on “casual employment” tell us.
I’ve drilled into previously unpublished data[3] from the Australian Bureau of Statistics to get a better sense of what “casual employment” means for those employed as such.
Overall, what I’ve found suggests the “casual” employment relationship is not about doing work for which employers need flexibility. It’s not about workers doing things that need doing at varying times for short periods.
The flexibility is really in employers’ ability to hire and fire, thereby increasing their power. For many casual employees there’s no real flexibility, only permanent insecurity.
The federal government’s new bill will not solve this. It will reinforce it.
Read more: So much for consensus: Morrison government's industrial relations bill is a business wish list[4]
Casual definitions
Technically the ABS does not routinely estimate the numbers of casual employees. For a few years (to 2013) it published data on workers who received a casual loading, and it occasionally asks people to self-identify whether they are casuals. But mostly its data on “workers without leave entitlements[5]” (collected quarterly) is used as a proxy measure of casual employment.
About 24% of Australian employees were in this boat in 2019[6] – a high proportion compared with most other industrialised countries.
References
- ^ two (www.judgments.fedcourt.gov.au)
- ^ recent (www.judgments.fedcourt.gov.au)
- ^ previously unpublished data (www.griffith.edu.au)
- ^ So much for consensus: Morrison government's industrial relations bill is a business wish list (theconversation.com)
- ^ workers without leave entitlements (www.abs.gov.au)
- ^ boat in 2019 (www.abs.gov.au)
- ^ CC BY-NC-ND (creativecommons.org)
- ^ Self-employment and casual work aren't increasing but so many jobs are insecure – what's going on? (theconversation.com)
- ^ CC BY-NC-ND (creativecommons.org)
- ^ less than half (www.griffith.edu.au)
- ^ breaches of awards (www.aph.gov.au)
- ^ study published in 2019 (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
- ^ previous (www.judgments.fedcourt.gov.au)
- ^ decisions (www.judgments.fedcourt.gov.au)
Authors: David Peetz, Professor of Employment Relations, Centre for Work, Organisation and Wellbeing, Griffith University