Sunday 5 June 2022

Albanese Labor Government tells Fair Work Commission that "The new Government has a different view on the Annual Wage Review to the previous Government" and proceeds to put the case that low paid workers - particularly females & the young in casual employment - deserve a real wage


On 30 May 2022 the Australian Fair Work Commission issued a statement in response to the Albanese Labor Government seeking to make a new submission of the Annual Wage Review 2021–22.


[2022] FWCFB 84


STATEMENT


Fair Work Act 2009

s.285—Annual wage reviews to be conducted

Annual Wage Review 2021–22

(C2022/1)


JUSTICE ROSS, PRESIDENT

VICE PRESIDENT CATANZARITI

DEPUTY PRESIDENT ASBURY

COMMISSIONER HAMPTON

MR FERGUSON

PROFESSOR WOODEN

MS LABINE-ROMAIN MELBOURNE 30 MAY 2022


AMENDED TIMETABLE


[1] The current timetable for 2021-22 Annual Wage Review provides that parties are to lodge submissions on the National Accounts March quarter 2022 by Friday 3 June 2022 and submissions in reply are to be lodged by Tuesday 7 June 2022.


[2] On Friday 27 May 2022 the President received correspondence from the Prime Minister seeking leave to make a new Australian Government submission to the 2021-22 Annual Wage Review. The correspondence states that the new submission will outline the Government’s position ‘on a fair increase to minimum and award wages for Australia’s lowest paid workers, noting the rising costs of living’.


[3] Section 289(1) of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) (the Act) requires the Commission to ensure that all persons and bodies have a reasonable opportunity to make submissions to the 2021-22 Annual Wage Review. We note that from 11 April 2022 until recently, the Australian Government was in caretaker mode.


[4] A key consideration in responding to the request is the statutory constraints on the conduct of annual wage reviews. In particular, s.285(1) of the Act requires the Commission to‘conduct and complete an annual wage review in each financial year’. It follows that 30 June 2022 is the outer limit for completion of the 2021-22 Review. As a practical matter, our decision must be published some time before 30 June to allow sufficient time for draft award variation determinations to be published and for interested parties to submit corrections or other amendments to the draft determinations.


[5] In the course of the public consultations on 18 May 2022 the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry and others foreshadowed that they would seek an opportunity to respond in the event the Australian Government Government made a further substantive submission.1


[6] We grant leave for the Australian Government to make a new submission.


[7] The statutory deadline and requirement to provide interested parties with an opportunity to make comments on such a submission impose some practical constraints on the timing and length of the new submission.


[8] Accordingly, the timetable for the 2021-22 Annual Wage Review is varied as follows:

1. The Australian Government may lodge a new submission to the Review by no later than 4pm (AEST) on Friday 3 June 2022. The submission is to be no longer than 10 A4 pages.

2. Interested parties may lodge submissions in reply by no later than 4pm (AEST) on Wednesday 8 June 2022.

3. Reply submissions regarding the National Accounts March quarter 2022 may be lodged by no later than 4pm (AEST) on Wednesday 8 June 2022.

4. Parties have liberty to apply.


PRESIDENT

Printed by authority of the Commonwealth Government Printer

<PR742109>


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


The Fair Work Commission have granted permission for a new submission the Albanese Government lodged an 6 page 29 point document three days later, pressing the case for a further increase in the minimum wage, pointing out that high and rising inflation and falling real wages are creating cost-of-living pressures, particularly for Australia’s low-paid workers.


New Australian Government Submission to the Fair Work Commission

Annual Wage Review 2022, 3 June 2022:


1 Executive Summary


1. The Government thanks the Fair Work Commission’s Expert Panel conducting the Annual Wage Review (‘the Panel’) for the opportunity to make a submission. In this submission, the Government provides updated evidence on the economy, labour market, and low-paid workers to assist the Panel in making its decision.


2. Given the highly unusual and challenging economic conditions, the Government is making a recommendation to the Fair Work Commission in relation to this year’s wage decision.


3. The new Government has a different view on the Annual Wage Review to the previous Government. In particular, the direction of the previous Government’s submission headed “The importance of low-paid work” does not reflect the priorities of this Government.


4. High and rising inflation and falling real wages are creating cost-of-living pressures, particularly for Australia’s low-paid workers. Economic conditions are particularly challenging given inflation is at a 21-year high of 5.1 per cent and is expected to increase further in the near-term due to persistent and compounding supply shocks. The current inflation rate is 2.7 percentage points higher than wages growth as measured by the Wage Price Index (WPI), which means on average, Australians are experiencing the sharpest decline in real wages in 21 years. The National Accounts results released this week provide further evidence of the broad-based domestic price pressures which were clear in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) release for the March quarter 2022.


5. In considering its decision on wages for this year, the Government recommends that the Fair Work Commission ensures that the real wages of Australia’s low-paid workers do not go backwards.


6. High and rising inflation and weak wages growth are reducing real wages across the economy and creating cost-of-living pressures for low-paid workers. It is critical to ensure that these workers do not bear a disproportionate impact of these challenging conditions.


7. The new Government does not want to see Australian workers go backwards; in particular, those workers on low rates of pay who are experiencing the worst impacts of inflation and have the least capacity to draw on savings.


8. The Government notes that over the past decade, in 9 out of 10 years, the Panel has increased the minimum wage rate in line with, or above, inflation. The largest increase in recent years was in 2018-19 where a 3.5 per cent increase was ordered, when inflation was only 1.9 per cent. This submission does not suggest that inflation should be the only consideration when determining wages.


9. This submission does not suggest that across-the-board, wages should automatically increase in line with inflation. The key driver of real wage growth (excluding inflation) over the longer-term is labour productivity. The current economic circumstances are highly unusual and challenging, and the Government’s submission pertains specifically to the low-paid and in the current macroeconomic context.


10. Australia’s low-paid workers, many of whom are young, female and in casual employment, are far more likely than higher paid workers to find themselves experiencing financial hardship. Many of these workers made significant contributions in the provision of essential services during COVID-19.


11. Maintaining the relative standard of living of low-paid workers is not expected to have a material impact on employment.


12. Ensuring that real wages for low-paid workers do not go backwards in these circumstances will protect the relative living standards for these workers, prevent further financial hardship and avoid adverse distributional outcomes and broader economic and social risks.


13. This submission is one of the important first steps in the Government’s plans to address the impacts of the skyrocketing costs of living for Australian workers and families. It is part of the Government’s broader economic plan, calibrated to address inflation by driving productivity growth and expanding the capacity of the economy to alleviate supply side pressures. The Government will do this through investments in cleaner and cheaper energy, in a better-trained workforce with higher participation and in the care economy, digital economy and a future made in Australia.


2 Economy and labour market update…..


14. Over the past 12 months, global and domestic inflationary pressures have significantly increased. These pressures are now expected to be stronger and more persistent, due to compounding global supply shocks. The war in Ukraine and China’s COVID-19 outbreak are exacerbating existing strains in global supply chains and significantly driving up global energy and food prices.


15. Domestic headline consumer price inflation increased by 5.1 per cent through the year to the March quarter of 2022, the fastest increase in 21 years. The trimmed mean measure of core inflation also picked up to 3.7 per cent through the year to the March quarter, the highest increase since early 2009. Inflationary pressures have begun to broaden, with prices increasing in 80 per cent of the inflation components in the March quarter.


16. The Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) May 2022 Statement on Monetary Policy now forecasts that inflation will peak at around 6 per cent in the second half of 2022.


17. While some external inflationary pressures, such as international shipping costs, appear to have peaked, they remain elevated and other inflationary pressures are increasing. The COVID-19 outbreak and major city lockdowns in China present a significant upside risk to imported goods prices. Domestically, higher wholesale electricity prices could add further pressure to retail electricity prices and headline inflation.


18. Higher inflation is now expected to persist throughout 2022 and into 2023. If, as currently expected, global supply chain pressures dissipate, oil prices moderate and consumption patterns return to a more normal balance between goods and services, headline inflation would be expected to ease over the course of 2023.


19. Wages as measured by the WPI grew by 2.4 per cent through the year to the March quarter. With inflation at 5.1 per cent, this means that on average, real wages have seen the sharpest decline in 21 years. The Government notes that this fall in real wages follows persistently and historically low real wages growth over the past decade.


20. While the Government welcomes recent falls in the unemployment rate, it notes that this has not yet been associated with broad-based wages growth. Assuming global supply factors driving up inflation dissipate as expected, nominal wages growth is expected to begin outpacing inflation.


21. The RBA’s May 2022 Statement on Monetary Policy forecast the WPI to grow by 3.3 per cent through the year to the June quarter 2023 and by 3.7 per cent through the year to the June quarter 2024.


22. The stronger than expected rise in inflation has seen consumer prices outpace wages to date, resulting in larger near-term declines in real wages. The near-term pick-up in inflation creates particularly acute cost-of-living pressures on the low-paid.


23. There are also significant economic risks associated with falling real wages. Most notably, reduced capacity to spend could weigh on household consumption with flow-on effects to aggregate demand more broadly.


24. While higher inflation and the anticipated tightening of monetary policy may dampen activity, it is not expected to lead to a substantial increase in the unemployment rate or a deterioration in economic growth.


25. The current economic circumstances are complex and substantial risks remain, including the possibility of more significant and sustained price pressures, or a more substantial slowing in activity.


3 Low-paid workers and the cost of living…..


26. The current cost-of-living pressures will have a disproportionate impact on low-paid workers.


27. Recent inflationary pressures have been stronger for non-discretionary goods and services, which increased by 6.6 per cent through the year to the March quarter of 2022. Fuel, food and new dwellings contributed nearly 3 percentage points to headline inflation, with fuel rising by 35 per cent in the past 12 months.


28. Low-paid workers have a diverse range of characteristics. In 2020, low-paid workers were more likely to be female, employed on a casual basis and under 30 years of age. Given this, a more substantial increase for those on low wages would be beneficial in assisting to narrow the gender pay gap.


29. With growth in the WPI expected to strengthen over the forecast period, supporting a more substantial increase for low-paid workers will also help maintain relative living standards for the low-paid.


The National Retail Association, Australian Industry Group, Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Australian Business Industrial and NSW Business Chamber Ltd have taken up the Commissioners' invitation to make new submissions of their own. Which unsurprisingly a not in favour of the new federal government submission, and indeed would like any rise in the minimum wage as applied to specific award classifications pushed back to November 2022. Details can be found at:

https://www.fwc.gov.au/hearings-decisions/major-cases/annual-wage-reviews/annual-wage-review-2021-22/submissions-annual


 

Cashless Debit Card on its way out the door along with the private financial corporation which made money out of people's misery, Indue Limited



























Amanda Rishworth MP, Minister for Social Services.
Labor Member for Kingston

@AmandaRishworth 

Click on image to enlarge 

 


 

Friday 3 June 2022

A distant war......


Given that the Russian invasion of Ukrainea nation at least 12,975 km from the Australian mainland – is contributing to cost of living pressures here at home, it is perhaps time I mention that distant war which began on 24 February 2022.


Ukraine
IMAGE: Google Earth


Alasdair McCallum, PhD candidate, School of Social Sciences, Monash University, MediaNet media release, 3 June 2022:


On the 100th day of this war, it is important to acknowledge Ukrainians living under Russian occupation. The actions of the Russian occupiers demonstrate that the purported goal of the ‘denazification’ of Ukraine is really a wholesale ‘de-Ukrainisation’. Street signs have been changed from Ukrainian to Russian, streets have been renamed after KGB officers known for persecuting Ukrainians, flags and coats of arms changed to Imperial Russian and Soviet symbols. Still more sinister is the mass abduction of ‘orphans’ from Ukraine to Russia and mass deportations of civilians.”


MarketScreener, 1 June 2022:


(Reuters) - Russia's invasion of Ukraine enters its 100th day on Friday with no end in sight to the fighting that has killed thousands, uprooted millions and reduced cities to rubble.

After abandoning its assault on the capital, Kyiv, Russia is pressing on in the east and south in the face of mounting sanctions and a fierce Ukrainian counter-offensive bolstered by Western arms.


Some key events in the conflict so far:


* Feb. 24: Russia invades Ukraine from three fronts in the biggest assault on a European state since World War Two. Tens of thousands flee.


* Russian President Vladimir Putin announces a "special military operation" to demilitarise and "denazify" Ukraine. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy tweets: "Russia has embarked on a path of evil, but Ukraine is defending itself."


* Feb. 25: Ukrainian forces battle Russian invaders in the north, east and south. Artillery pounds Kyiv and its suburbs.


* March 1: A U.S. official says a miles-long Russian armoured column bearing down on Kyiv is beset by logistical problems.


* Russia hits a TV tower in Kyiv and intensifies its long-range bombardment of Kharkiv in the northeast and other cities, in what is seen as a shift in Moscow's tactics as its hopes of a quick charge on the capital fade.


* March 2: Russian forces start a siege of the southeastern port of Mariupol, seen as vital to Moscow's attempts to link the eastern Donbas region with Crimea, the Black Sea peninsula Russia seized in 2014.


* Russian troops enter the Black Sea port of Kherson, the first large urban centre captured.


* One million people have fled Ukraine, the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) says.


* March 4: Russian forces seize Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, Europe's biggest. NATO rejects Ukraine's appeal for no-fly zones, saying they would escalate the conflict.


* March 8: Civilians flee the northeastern city of Sumy in the first successful humanitarian corridor agreed. Two million have now fled Ukraine, the UNHCR says. 


* March 9: Ukraine accuses Russia of bombing a maternity hospital in Mariupol, burying people in the rubble. Russia says Ukrainian fighters were occupying the building.


* March 13: Russia extends its war deep into western Ukraine, firing missiles at a base near the border with NATO member Poland.


* March 16: Ukraine accuses Russia of bombing a Mariupol theatre where hundreds of civilians are sheltering. Moscow denies it.


* March 25: Moscow signals a shift in focus to making gains in the east, while Ukrainian forces press to recapture towns outside Kyiv.


* March 30: More than 4 million people have fled Ukraine, the UNHCR says.


* April 3/4: Ukraine accuses Russia of war crimes after a mass grave and bodies of people shot at close range are found in the recaptured town of Bucha. The Kremlin denies responsibility and says images of bodies were staged.


* April 8: Ukraine blames Russia for a missile attack on a train station in Kramatorsk that killed at least 52 people trying to flee the looming eastern offensive. Moscow denies responsibility.


* April 14: Russia's lead warship in the Black Sea, the Moskva, sinks after what Ukraine says was a missile strike. Russia blames an ammunition explosion. 


* April 18: Russia launches what Ukraine describes as the Battle of Donbas, a campaign to seize two provinces and salvage a battlefield victory. 


* April 21: Putin declares Mariupol "liberated" after nearly two months of siege, but hundreds of defenders hold out inside the city's huge Azovstal steelworks.


* April 25/26: Moldova's pro-Russian breakaway region of Transdniestria says blasts hit a ministry and two radio masts. It blames neighbouring Ukraine. Kyiv accuses Moscow of staging the attacks to try to widen the conflict.


* April 28: Russia fires two missiles into Kyiv during a visit by U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, Ukraine says. The Kremlin accuses Ukraine of attacking Russian regions near the border.


* May 1: About 100 Ukrainian civilians are evacuated from Mariupol's ruined Azovstal steelworks, in what the United Nations says is a "safe passage operation".


* May 7: As many as 60 people are feared dead after a bomb strikes a village school in Bilohorivka, eastern Ukraine, the regional governor says.


* May 9: Putin exhorts Russians to battle in a defiant Victory Day speech, but is silent about plans for any escalation in Ukraine.


* May 10: Ukraine says its forces have recaptured villages north and northeast of Kharkiv in a counter-offensive. 


* May 12: More than 6 million people have fled Ukraine, the UNHCR says.


* May 14: Ukrainian forces have launched a counteroffensive near the eastern Russian-held town of Izium, the local governor says.


* May 18: Finland and Sweden apply to join NATO, a move that would lead to the expansion of the Western military alliance that Putin aimed to prevent.


* May 20: Russia says the last of Ukrainian fighters holding out at Mariupol's Azovstal steelworks have surrendered. Hours earlier, Zelenskiy said Ukraine's military had told the defenders they could get out and save their lives.


* May 21/22: Russia launches an offensive in Luhansk, one of two provinces in Donbas, focusing the attack on twin cities of Sloviansk and Sievierodonetsk.


* May 23: In the first war crimes trial of the conflict, a Kyiv court sentences a young Russian tank commander to life in prison for killing an unarmed civilian.


* May 25: Putin signs a decree simplifying the process for residents of newly captured districts to acquire Russian citizenship and passports in a bid to solidify Moscow's grip on the seized territory.


* May 29: Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov calls the "liberation" of Donbas an "unconditional priority" for Moscow, while Russian forces appear close to seizing the entire Luhansk region there after days of slow but steady gains.


* May 31: Local officials say it is no longer possible to evacuate civilians trapped in Sievierodonetsk, where Ukrainian forces are still holding out but much of the city is under Russian control.


* June 1: Russia criticises U.S. decision to supply advanced rocket systems to Ukraine, warning it could widen the conflict and increase the risk of direct confrontation with Washington. Secretary of State Antony Blinken says Ukraine had given assurances it will not use the systems against targets on Russian territory.


(Compiled by Andrew Heavens and Tomasz Janowski; Editing by Alison Williams)

Reuters 2022


Climate change, distant war & a continuing global pandemic are all impacting on household budgets and business in Australia right now


With La Niña conditions expected to continue above average rainfall over Winter months, higher commercial and residential electricity prices to be reflected in quarterly bills sometime after 1 July 2022, petrol prices at the pump making life harder for small business and households alike, food prices rapidly rising and the loss of commercial passenger flights to Lismore and Grafton airports with a significant reduction in flights to Ballina, Northern Rivers residents are going to have to dig a little deeper to find that fortitude the region’s communities are known for.


BACKGROUND


ANZ Research, Agricultural Insight, 31 May 2022. “Global Food Crisis To Worsen”, exceprt:


Bringing it home


Food shortages are expected to worsen as climatic issues, energy shortages, the pandemic and the invasion of Ukraine all impact the world’s ability to produce sufficient food. China appears to be one step ahead of the rest of the world in terms of securing additional food supplies. Their policy to increase their reserves of imported products is now serving them well as other countries scramble to import product at inflated prices.


High global food prices will cause hunger in developing nations and erode wealth globally, as it will continue to underpin inflation. Food-exporting nations like Australia and New Zealand may continue to benefit in a net sense from high commodity prices, but it’s hard going for lower-income earners. In addition, as global prices become too expensive, demand will fall, as consumers’ ability to purchase higher-value proteins such as dairy products and red meats is reduced. Demand for basic foodstuffs such as grains is not expected to wane to the same extent – people have to eat.


Therefore the world will need to wait for global supply to increase before these markets rebalance and prices temper.


It’s also worth noting that high food prices are not conducive to geopolitical stability. Hunger induces migration and topples governments. The food crisis is another factor to add to the growing list of potential geopolitical risks as the world tentatively emerges from the shadow of COVID-19. [my yellow highlighting]


Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), Consumer Priece Index: March Quarter 2022, 27 April 2022:


  • The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 2.1% this quarter.

  • Over the twelve months to the March 2022 quarter, the CPI rose 5.1%.

  • The most significant price rises were New dwelling purchase by owner-occupiers (+5.7%) and Automotive fuel (+11.0%)….


Food and non-alcoholic beverages rose by 2.8% since the previous December 2021 quarter and 4.3% since March Quarter 2021. Health prices also rose 2.3% since the previous quarter and 3.5% since March Quarter 2021. Education prices went up by 4.5% since the previous quarter and 4.7% since March Quarter 2021. Housing prices rose by 2.4% from the previous quarter and 6.7% since last year’s March quarter. While Transport prices rose 4.2% since the previous quarter and a whopping 13.7% since last year’s March quarter.

With the exception of Clothing and footwear every CPI benchmark rose since the previous quarter.


The Guardian, 1 June 2022:


Australia is set for its third bumper season of crops in a row, but the increased production will probably bring little relief at the cash register as rising global demand pushes prices skyward.


Australian farmers will plant an area almost the size of England this winter as they try to take advantage of soaring global food prices and a third year of good rains.


The quality of production, though, may be hit by waterlogged fields and reduced fertiliser use as those costs surge, according to Rabobank. Local manufacturers, too, say they’re under strain as raw material and other prices climb and not all of the increases can be passed on.


This winter, farmers will plant a record 23.83m hectares, up 1% on last year, and just shy of England’s 24.36m total area, the bank said in its Winter Crop Outlook. That tally is also 11% more than the five-year average, with wheat plantings up 1.4% and canola, an oilseed, up by 20.9%. Plantings of barley, oats and pulses have dropped…..


Too much rain, though, has forced some farmers to delay or even replant crops – including three plantings of canola in some parts of New South Wales, Voznesenski said.


Other challenges include higher costs for diesel and agrochemicals from pesticides to fertilisers. And while prices have been hitting record levels globally, limited export capacity has hindered exports, meaning farmers have missed out on some of the best prices, he said.


However, Tanya Barden, chief executive of the Food & Grocery Council, said local food manufacturers hadn’t seen much benefit. They were struggling from unprecedented steepening prices for all manner of inputs, from wheat to energy and freight and packaging costs.


Input costs had risen by 50% over the last decade, and so profitability has dropped from $8bn [a year] to $5bn, and capital investment stagnated,” Barden said. “Industry now is not in a position where it’s able to keep absorbing all these massive additional levels of cost increases.”


While grocery food prices rose 5.3% in the year to March, according to ABS data, they rose 4% in the previous three months alone, she said.


With the full impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Covid-related disruptions in China still to be felt, it was likely food price inflation would quicken in this and coming quarters, she said.


A separate report by ANZ on Tuesday, meanwhile, argued the world faced a “prolonged global food crisis” caused by lost exports from Russia and Ukraine, two of the biggest exporters…..


Susan Kilsby, an agriculture economist with ANZ, said food inflation is going to be an issue that will “plague Australia and most other countries” well into 2023.


Demand for grains tends to be relatively inelastic, so for global grain prices to ease we really need to see an increase in the supply of grain that is available to be exported globally,” Kilsby said.


While wheat plantings in Australia will be large by historical levels, yields may fall from the highs of recent years.


La Niña brings more rains in Australia and Asia, while drought in the Americas,” she said, adding the timing of the rainfall can also have a big effect on output.


Rabobank in its report noted Australian farmers have been investing heavily in new storage capacity to cope with increased production and also the limited capacity of grain handlers and exporters to move their crops.


Supply chain snags, however, mean some of the additional spending is not resulting in the equipment arriving.


In some cases, farmers “can order them, but they’re not even told when they can get” the extra storage, with waits stretching out to a year.


There’s a lot less certainty in their world at the moment,” Rabobank’s Voznesenski said. [my yellow highlighting]


Soybean farmers on NSW North Coast suffer near-total crop losses. Region grows high-end soy bean crop for foods such as tofu with estimated value of $20 million. Ongoing rain after Feburary-March flooding is causing further losses.


That record flood caused extensive damage to the NSW Sugar Milling Co-operative’s three sugar mills on the Northern Rivers and 3,000 tonnes of raw sugar had to be condemned at Harwood, but it is expected that Condong on the Tweed and Harwood on the Clarence will be operational for the late June start to crushing while the Broadwater enterprise on the Richmond, which experienced extensive damage to the steam and power generation facility may not be fully operational until the end of August.


Australian Institute of Petroleum, Weekly Petrol Prices Report: Week Ending 29 May 2022:


Average Petrol retail price this week: 200.0 cents

Average Petrol wholesale price this week: 189.7 cents


Prices have been rising steadily. With the average petrol retail price for the week ending 1 May 2022 coming in at 178.2 cents and the average petrol wholesale price at 163.1 cents.

The week ending 8 May saw the retail price at 179.6 cents and wholesale price 169.2 cents. By the week ending 15 May average prices had risen to retail 185.0 cents and wholesale 178.7 cents. The following week ending 22 May averages prices had again increased to retail 199.1 cents and wholesale 183.3 cents.


Australian Energy Market, AER Statement – Retail Market, 1 June 2022, excerpt:


As outlined in both our Q1 Quarterly Wholesale Report and our Final Determination of the Default Market Offer last week, there continues to be volatility in the wholesale energy market resulting in added cost pressures on both retailers and consumers.


The AER is closely monitoring the situation in both the wholesale and retail markets and ensuring all participants are complying with the law and the rules…..


ABS, Australian National Accounts: National Income, Expenditure and Product, March 2022, 1 June 2022:


The La Nina weather cycle influenced Australia’s weather during summer and early autumn, leading to severe flooding in areas of south-east Queensland and northern New South Wales.


The impacts of these events can be seen in key national accounts aggregates. Severe storms disrupted mining and construction activity, resulting in reduced gross value added for these industries. Residential and commercial properties were damaged, resulting in increased non-life insurance claims and governments increased spending on defence assistance for affected areas.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Industry Gross Value Added

The response to the L-strain outbreak of COVID-19 led to a large fall in gross value added (GVA) in the June quarter 2020, driven by a record decrease in market sector GVA. Impacts were widespread throughout market industries, with only Mining and Financial and Insurance Services recording growth. The largest falls were seen in tourism and hospitality-related industries, reflecting the restrictions imposed on movement.


Non-market GVA declined driven by Health Care and Social Assistance. Elective surgeries were cancelled and visits to health care professionals declined as households sought to limit the spread of the virus. Both market and non-market GVA partially recovered in the September quarter 2020 as restrictions were lifted.


The Delta strain of COVID-19 had similar effects on market and non-market GVA, with trading and mobility restrictions reducing demand for many goods and services. The falls were not as pronounced as those that occurred during the L-strain, as fewer states experienced outbreaks. Additionally, trading frameworks such as COVID-19 safety plans were developed to allow some businesses in affected states to keep operating under restrictions such as mandatory QR check-ins for patrons and venue capacity limits.


The absence of lockdowns under the Omicron variant resulted in a lower impact on demand. While restrictions were less stringent, hours worked fell due to high COVID-19 infection rates and subsequent isolation requirements. Market sector GVA rose in the March quarter 2022, with the reopening of domestic and international borders. Growth was recorded in travel-related industries such as Transport, Postal and Warehousing and Accommodation and Food Services. Non-market GVA fell due to a contraction in Health Care and Social Assistance, however the fall was less severe than for the prior strains.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


UPDATE

ABC News, 3 June 2022:


Australian manufacturers facing massive increases in gas prices are warning they could be forced to shut, with tens of thousands of jobs on the line.


Gas prices on the spot market have quadrupled amid supply constraints, local coal-fired power station outages, and the war in Ukraine.


Australia's largest plastics producer Qenos buys about 40 per cent of its gas on the open market.


"Prices have gone up in the spot market to between $30 and $40 a gigajoule. In fact, that's in a month alone, that's an increase of 300 to 400 per cent," Qenos chief executive Steve Bell said.


"For energy-intensive businesses like ours that is not sustainable."….


On Wednesday, AEMO triggered the Gas Supply Guarantee Mechanism for the first time since it was introduced in 2017. The mechanism calls for the market to release supply and come up with a plan to address a potential shortfall.


Analyst Gilles Walgenwitz said without enough renewables capacity in the grid to make up the shortfall, local coal fired power station outages were also pushing up gas prices.


"We have about six gigawatts of coal capacity missing in Queensland, six gigawatts in New South Wales. That's huge, when you compare to the total capacity normally available," he said.


"And so, we have much more gas power generation coming into play to meet the demand and it happens that at the same time, the price of gas is extremely high."