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Underemployment, Loneliness, and Unaffordable Housing - YouTube
Channel: Daily Insight
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A report released yesterday by the Australian
Institute of Health and Welfare titled, “Australia’s
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Welfare 2019”, shows the key trends in Australia’s
social support, housing, education, and employment.
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Australia spends about 10.9% of its GDP on
welfare putting it below the OECD median.
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Finland and other European countries spend
much more on welfare than do countries like
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the UK, Australia, the United States, and
Canada.
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Unemployment in Australia has stayed relatively
stable hovering around the 5 to 6% mark over
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the last decade.
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It’s currently sitting at 5.2%.
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Remember, however, that employment is defined
as having only worked one hour a week or more
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(so you could be earning as little as $19.49
a week and still be classified as ‘employed’).
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And to be considered unemployed, you must
be actively looking for work.
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So if you’ve given up looking for work,
guess what, you’re not unemployed.
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The rate of long-term unemployment has increased
from 15% in 2009 to 25% in 2018.
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So one in four unemployed people have been
looking for work for more than a year without
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success.
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That is, they can’t even find one hour of
work per week.
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However, if we look at underemployment, we
can see that the rates are significantly higher
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and have been steadily trending upwards over
the last decade.
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If you combine both unemployment and
underemployment, we have almost 14%
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of the Australian labour force not being
able to find enough work.
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Remembering that people who have given up
looking for work don’t count.
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The number of people in part-time employment
has risen from 28% in 2008 to 31% in 2018.
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The number of people in apprenticeships is
falling, from about 336,000 in 2014 to 267,000
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last year.
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The rate of females participating in apprenticeships
is also falling.
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The rate of old people on the disability support
pension or carer payment has increased rather
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dramatically from 0.2% in 2001 to 3% in 2018.
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Taking into account inflation, the government
is actually spending a lot more on welfare
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per person than it once did.
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Consequently, the number of people working
in welfare has also been steadily increasing.
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When it comes to home ownership, young people
are losing out.
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The rate of home ownership for 25 to 29-year-olds
has plummeted from 50% in 1971 to 37%.
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For 30 to 34-year-olds, it’s fallen from
64% to 50%.
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Unsurprisingly, the number of people renting
has increased for all age categories with
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more and more people renting for life.
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The proportion of households spending more
than half their income on housing is growing,
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while the proportion of people spending less
than 25% is shrinking.
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Simply existing in Australia is becoming increasingly
more expensive.
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Due to rising underemployment and a lack of
affordable housing, Australia is also facing
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a loneliness epidemic.
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One in four Australians are currently lonely,
with one in two Australians feeling lonely
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at least one day a week.
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Loneliness has been linked to premature death,
poor physical and mental health, and general
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dissatisfaction with life.
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Four in five people entering prison are male.
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Two in five are Indigenous.
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Two thirds are under 40.
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Three quarters have been to prison before,
and half are unemployed.
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Unemployment leads to crime and vice-versa.
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Despite the rising underemployment issue,
it turns out overemployment has also become
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an issue and may just be the reason why wages
have stagnated.
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The wage price index experienced record lows
before rising barely above rising living costs.
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The Australia Institute conducted research
that shows Australians are owed about $106
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billion in overtime.
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The average worker puts in six hours of unpaid
overtime per week, which equates to working
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an extra two months for free every year, and
this trend is increasing.
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Workplace expert, Conrad Liveris, had these
words to say,
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“It's basically two different sides of the
stress coin.
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There's people who are desperate for more
hours at work, and there are people who are
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struggling to even keep a semblance of a life.
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You're either running around stressed about
paying your bills, or you're losing your relationships
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with people around you — and the only life
you have is that of work.
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Both of them are incredibly sad and frustrated,
and you know they're basically linked.”
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Professor John Buchanan at the University
of Sydney Business School spoke of the ongoing
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work hours issue in Australia.
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He said,
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“People are starting to wake-up, we do have
a serious working time problem.
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We work amongst the longest hours, we've got
amongst the highest proportion of part-time
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workers, and amongst many of those part-timers
they want to work more hours.
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Hours of work started to get out of control
in the 1980s and it's been locked in now in
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enterprise agreements and weakly-regulated
parts of the labour market.
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You now have many workers not having enough
hours, and those who do have work — full-timers
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— working amongst the longest hours in the
world.”
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Secretary of the Australian Council of Trade
Unions, Sally McManus, spoke of the rising
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issue of wage theft.
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She said,
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“If you feel as though you can't say no
to your employer and you have to work those
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extra hours, often unpaid, so it's really
a form of wage theft, or job theft.
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You're going to work those hours in order
to keep your job, and that's a problem.
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It's not their fault as individuals.
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They're in a position where often they're
put under pressure to work those extra hours
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for free.
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And so employers, if they think they can get
people who work all those hours for free,
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why would they employ someone they have to
pay?”
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What are your thoughts?
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Is Australia facing an underemployment and
an overemployment crisis simultaneously?
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What can be done about it?
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Are employers getting away with too much,
or are they under pressure as well to complete
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in this increasingly globalised world?
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