Labour hire is a form of indirect employment relationship
in which an agency supplies workers to work at a workplace controlled
by a third party (the host), usually in return for a fee from the host.
Labour hire arrangements are similar to employment placement services,
and comprise a part of the employment services industry. However, it
may be assumed that when an employment placement agency secures a worker
a job, their relationship is likely to finish. With labour hire arrangements,
the three-way relationship between host, agency and worker will continue
for the period of the assignment.
The most recent Australian Bureau of Statistics data
on number employed through labour hire arrangements suggests that 290 100
employees were on-hired through agencies in June 2002 and 162 000
workers were paid by labour hire firms in November 2001 (almost doubling
from 84 300 some three years earlier). The Australian Council of
Trade Unions (ACTU) estimates that one in five workplaces uses labour
hire, while in the largest workplaces (by employment) more than half
use labour hire agencies. While reasons for the growth of labour hire
vary, it appears that companies will turn to employment services after
their own companys internal personnel management or human resource
management functions have been reduced or contracted out.
The Bureau of Statistics estimates that the value of
the employment services industry in 200102 was $10.2 billion, although
it notes that the industry generated a 30 per cent increase in income
over the three years 199899 to 200102. The growth of this industry
has generated concerns for Labor governments in particular, as unions
have put political and industrial demands on governments to curb the
use of labour hire. Also, the recent debate over the casualisation of
the workforce is one manifestation of the growth of labour hire.(1)
Labour hire workers may be denied access to the benefits
of the collectively negotiated labour agreements of the principal business
and these businesses may deny responsibility for the welfare of this
class of worker, particularly in the areas of health and safety and
training.(2) The problems for injured labour hire
workers are compounded in that they are less likely to have a specific
work site to which to return for rehabilitation and return-to-work duties.
One issue that unions often raise is that labour hire
workers at a particular site may be paid the award rate, while their
directly employed colleagues at the same site may be paid at a higher
enterprise bargaining rate.(3)
As labour hire workers have pursued grievances over
their employment terms or health and safety issues, industrial tribunals
in a number of cases have also questioned the use of a labour supply
intermediary, and have chosen to impose some employer obligations on
the host business. It should be stressed that such approaches do not
constitute the norm, as one of the key ongoing issues with labour hire
is whether the worker is: an employee, an independent contractor or
a dependent contractor. The definition of the form of employment or
engagement has major consequences in respect of related rights; for
example, only employees can commence legal action against an unfair
dismissal.
The growth of unstable, non-regular work routines has
implications for the living standards of agency workers.(4)
It also has implications for potential union members and the administration
of trade unions. ACTU Congress policy has reflected concern with labour
hire and, generally, unions have sought to rope-in the major labour
hire firms into the relevant industry awards, or to create special purpose
labour hire awards that may have reference to the industry awards.
The focus in 2004 will be on a NSW Labor Council test
case on casual and labour hire work, which will be heard by the NSW
Industrial Relations Commission. This case seeks, among other things,
the conversion of labour hire employment to direct employment after
six months of work. The federal government has signalled its intention
to intervene in this case, which is scheduled to begin in May 2004.
Employment placement or labour hire arrangements have
benefits for workers in the sense of having an agent scouting for work
and perhaps tailoring the conditionssay, short hours or temporary periodsto
suit the worker. For businesses the immediate advantage is numerical
flexibility, particularly the ability to add labour during periods of
demand, while not increasing the prime workforce numbers. In many respects
then, labour hire appears to be a feature of a modern labour market.
Australia
is noted in international comparisons of the conditions of temporary
work as having few restrictions on the use of temporary contracts. The
OECD has undertaken studies of the strictness of labour law in the use
of temporary workers. In Australia,
there are no restrictions on the type of work or areas of economic activity
where temporary work agencies may choose to operate. From the OECDs
perspective: [Australias]
labour law neither specifies a maximum number of successive contracts
or contract renewals.(5)
Against this relatively liberal background, governments
have taken initiatives to curb the worst features of the labour hire
industry. The New South Wales Government conducted an inquiry into the
labour hire industry in 2001 (NSW
Labour Hire Task Force Report), but has been reluctant to implement
all of its recommendations, although a tripartite council governing
the industry has been formed. A key recommendation was registration
of businesses operating to supply labour. Queensland expanded its industrial
relations law in 1999 to govern the operation of the labour hire industry.
Victoria will conduct its own inquiry
into labour hire in 2004. South Australia has also considered the growth
of atypical employment in a recent review of the states industrial
relations system and laws. Tasmania has sought to remove an exemption
on the payment of payroll tax by labour hire firms, thus increasing
their cost of operation. Western Australia has included labour hire
employment within its definition of an employer.
State governments may be able to control the worst
features of labour hire by placing conditions on the agencies through
registration or by amending state labour laws. (The exception may be
Victoria, which transferred its industrial system to the Commonwealth
in 1996.) However, as almost all the states have either acted to control
or review the labour hire industry, a national inquiry into its operation
would seem warranted.
Endnotes
- See, for example, Ken
Phillips, Casual
alternative wrongly demonised Australian Financial Review,
22 January 2004.
- Note the evidence
of Sally-Ann Taylor,
Australian Manufacturing Workers Union (AMWU) to the Senate Community
Affairs Committee Inquiry into Poverty and Financial Hardship, 26 May
2003, p. 302.
- ibid.
- Note the evidence of Dale
Carter to the Senate Community Affairs Committee:
although the workload at my childcare centre has increased in recent
months, management at the centre have decided to reduce staff hours.
The decision came closely after the announcement of the recent living
wage increase, 26 May 2003, p. 318.
- OECD Economic Surveys:Australia
(OECD, Paris, 2003), pp. 99101.