I remind you of this because,for 30 or 40 years in America,and now about a decade in Australia,the capitalist system – economists prefer calling it the market system – hasn’t been giving ordinary workers enough to keep them getting better off,while the few people at the top of the treehave been doing better,year after year.
If you wonder why so many Americans voted for a man like Donald Trump,and now delude themselves that he didn’t lose the last election,whythe Yanks seem to be rapidly dismantling their democracy,a big part of their discontent is their loss of faith that the economic system is giving them a fair shake.
Fortunately,it’s nothing like that bad in Australia. Not yet,anyway. What’s true is that the average standard of living in Australia today is no better than it was a decade ago – something that hasn’t happened before in the more than 75 years since World War II.
Over the eight years before the pandemic,wages rose barely faster than inflation. We’ve had wage stagnation,now made a lot worse by the supply-chain disruptions of the pandemic,soaring electricity and gas prices caused by Russia’s war,and by the way floods keep wiping out our fruit and vegetable crops.
When Labor went to this year’s federal election promising to “get wages moving”,I think it struck a chord with many voters.
After we ended centralised wage-fixing by the Industrial Relations Commission in the early 1990s,we moved to collective bargaining at the level of the individual enterprise. Workers’ right to strike was hedged about with many requirements and limits.