‘People are desperate’: ScoMo infuriates with JobSeeker statement
Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s claim that Australians aren’t looking for work due to the JobSeeker payment being too generous has been savaged by social welfare advocates, who have called for a permanent increase.
Morrison believes the increased JobSeeker rate has become a barrier to Australians seeking employment, telling 2GB that businesses have found it harder to find staff.
JobSeeker payments were doubled from $275 a week to $550 a week during the coronavirus pandemic.
"We are getting a lot of anecdotal feedback from small businesses, even large businesses," he said.
"Some of them are finding it hard to get people to come and take the shifts because they're on these higher levels of payment."
But the Australian Council of Social Services (ACOSS) has warned that there is just one job available for every 13 people seeking work on JobSeeker or Youth Allowance, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).
Additionally, new research from the Australian National University has found 15.1 per cent of people were unable to meet their regular housing costs in May - up from 6.9 per cent in April.
“We have just experienced the largest fall in jobs since the Great Depression. More people than ever before will struggle to find paid work. We’ve just seen 6,000 job losses at Qantas and thousands more in retail, including at Woolworths,” ACOSS CEO Dr Cassandra Goldie said.
“People are desperate to find jobs but there are not enough available. The doubling of JobSeeker to the current rate $550 per week is still $200 per week less than the minimum wage.”
She said inadequate payments are an impediment to people finding paid work, as the ability to cover the basics and avoid financial distress is critical to seek employment.
Queensland Labor Senator Murray Watt also slammed the Prime Minister’s words, sharing ABS data showing job vacancies.
Here’s some *actual* evidence, to go with the PM’s “anecdotal” evidence. @ABSStats shows only 125,000 job vacancies for the 1.6 million Australians on JobSeeker. pic.twitter.com/IiWTqfJEM0
— Senator Murray Watt (@MurrayWatt) June 29, 2020
The Australian Unemployed Workers Union, which represents unemployed Australians seeking work, also hit back at Morrison’s claims with a satirical list of verifiable claims of workers turning down work.
we tried to find some evidence pic.twitter.com/01mZelSxtV
— AUWU (@AusUnemployment) June 29, 2020
Novelist and comedian Dom Knight also queried the claim.
“It’s interesting hearing everyone say how JobKeeper is creating disincentives to work. I talked to a bartender on the weekend – before I read anything about this – who said he can’t turn down any shift because otherwise he’ll lose his $750/week!” Knight said on Twitter.
It’s interesting hearing everyone say how JobKeeper is creating disincentives to work. I talked to a bartender on the weekend – before I read anything about this – who said he can’t turn down any shift because otherwise he’ll lose his $750/week!
— Dom Knight (@domknight) June 29, 2020
The Grattan Institute has called for JobSeeker to be increased by at least $100 a week and open to more Australians.
It also called for JobKeeper to be extended into 2021 and expanded to scoop up previously ineligible workers in the tourism, arts and university sectors.
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