Roger Douglas youth rates bill an attack on workers

The Maritime Union of New Zealand has poured scorn on a bill introduced to Parliament by ACT MP Roger Douglas to reintroduce youth rates. The Minimum Wage (Mitigation of Youth Unemployment) Amendment Bill was drawn from the Members’ bills ballot yesterday, and the Union is urging the Government to distance itself from it.

The Mar­itime Union of New Zealand has poured scorn on a bill intro­duced to Par­lia­ment by ACT MP Roger Dou­glas to rein­tro­duce youth rates.

The Min­i­mum Wage (Mit­i­ga­tion of Youth Unem­ploy­ment) Amend­ment Bill was drawn from the Mem­bers’ bills bal­lot yes­ter­day, and the Union is urg­ing the Gov­ern­ment to dis­tance itself from it.

Mar­itime Union Nation­al Pres­i­dent Phil Adams says the best thing to do would be for Roger Dou­glas to retire now before caus­ing more harm.

“If he is so wor­ried about younger work­ers, he could move aside and that would open up a job oppor­tu­ni­ty for a young work­er with rel­e­vant ideas who is liv­ing in the real world.”

He says that Roger Dou­glas is pulling down an MPs salary, a par­lia­men­tary pen­sion and nation­al super, but he wants young peo­ple start­ing out in life to be trapped in low wages while accom­mo­da­tion, food and edu­ca­tion costs sky­rock­et­ed.

Mr Adams says unem­ploy­ment is a result of free mar­ket eco­nom­ic poli­cies, and when New Zealand had a high­ly reg­u­lat­ed econ­o­my and union­ized work­force dur­ing the 1950s and 1960s it had high rates of eco­nom­ic growth and extreme­ly low unem­ploy­ment.

“Ever since we have gone down the Roger Dou­glas path, things have got worse for work­ers. Unem­ploy­ment soared under his poli­cies in the 1980s, it got worse when his ideas were car­ried on in the 1990s and now we have unem­ploy­ment peak­ing again under the Nation­al Gov­ern­ment once again.”

He says that train­ing costs should be car­ried by employ­ers, as they prof­it­ed out of employ­ing skilled work­ers so they should pay for their train­ing.

Mr Adams says over the last gen­er­a­tion, the share of income going to work­ers has decreased and the share of income going to own­er’s prof­its has increased.

“The answer to boost employ­ment and wages is sim­ple. Lift the min­i­mum wage, keep youth rates, get work­ers into unions, and make sure work­ers are get­ting their share of the wealth they pro­duce.”

Youth rates were abol­ished in 2007.

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