Chapter 8 Administrative approaches
8.1
In addition to proposed legislative changes an array of administrative
measures may promote pay equity. The systemic nature and the persistence of a
gender wage gap in Australia means that it is unlikely that changes to the
legislative regime alone will be able to achieve this outcome. There needs to
be a significant shift in community culture and this can also be progressed
through the implementation of pay equity considerations across all relevant
government activities.
Commonwealth procurement policy
Achieving pay equity through Commonwealth contracts
8.2
Modern public administration has increasingly used contracts as a way of
achieving public policy goals. This is in part due to the extension over time
of areas of government activity and more recently the trend toward outsourcing
public functions to private and non-government entities. This inquiry and similar
inquiries in Queensland and New South Wales have received proposals that
government procurement policies be used as a mechanism to promote pay equity.
8.3
According to Seddon, it is generally accepted that the Commonwealth’s
executive power is limited under the Constitution by the legislative heads of
power set out in section 51.[1] The same does not apply
to the states and territories where executive power is not limited by
references to subject matter.[2] Seddon goes on to comment
that:
There is much academic controversy about precisely what the
limits on the Commonwealth's power to contract actually mean in a practical
sense, but it is reasonably safe to say that the limits impose no real fetter
on the Commonwealth’s power to enter into contracts, with the result that the
Commonwealth is for practical purposes in the same position as the states and
territories, enjoying an unlimited power to enter into contracts.[3]
8.4
This suggests that there is no constitutional limit on the class of
persons and business entities the Commonwealth can form an agreement with for
goods and services. For example, requiring employers to meet specified
standards as a condition of receiving direct Commonwealth funding to aged care
and child care facilities may be a way of encouraging pay equity in those
sectors. This raises questions, however, of how such requirements might fit
with modern award process, minimum wage setting, and enterprise bargaining.
8.5
As a general rule, the Commonwealth can use its executive power to enter
contracts, without the need for any statutory basis. However, the manner in
which procurement takes place is governed by the Financial Management and
Accountability Act 1997 (Commonwealth) and Regulations (SLR 2009 No. 41)
and Commonwealth Procurement Guidelines.
Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997
8.6
Under s. 44 (1) of the Financial Management
and Accountability Act 1997 (FMA), Chief Executives have special
responsibility to promote efficient, effective and ethical use of
Commonwealth resources. The CEO of a Commonwealth agency has the power to
enter into contracts, on behalf of the Commonwealth, in relation to the affairs
of the agency and, in doing so, must comply with FMA, the regulations, Finance
Minister’s Orders, Special Instructions and any other law (s. 44 (2)). Proper
use means efficient, effective and ethical use that is not inconsistent with
the policies of the Commonwealth (s. 44 (3)). The Regulations allow the
Minister to issue the Commonwealth Procurement Guidelines to which
officials must have regard when performing procurement duties.[4]
The Act and the Regulations envisage a wide discretion for the Minister to
determine how Commonwealth contracts are negotiated and administered.
8.7
The current Procurement Guidelines include the requirement that a
finance officer must not discriminate on the grounds of sex, race, and
disability in the procurement process (para. 5.2). The rule of
non-discrimination is consistent with federal discrimination law (which applies
to acts and practices of the Commonwealth) and is part of the procurement
policy commitment to effective competition (para. 5.1).
8.8
However, the Guidelines contain:
n no specific principle
of affirmative action for female owned businesses even though small business is
dominated by women;
n no specific requirement
to assess a contractor’s performance under Commonwealth law, such as the Sex
Discrimination Act 1984;[5] and
n no current
requirement that a contractor comply with a pay equity obligation to meet pay
equity goals or targets over a specified period or provide pay equity analysis.
8.9
In relation to policies that interact with procurement, the Commonwealth
Procurement Guidelines state that:
The FMA Regulations require that an approver must not approve
a proposal to spend public money unless satisfied, after reasonable inquiry
that it is in accordance with the policies of the Commonwealth.[6]
8.10
Given that approval is required to be in ‘accordance with the policies
of the Commonwealth’, firms should not be eligible for government procurement
contracts if they have not met the requirements under the proposed pay equity
legislation. This raises the question as to whether pay equity could be
usefully incorporated into the existing Procurement Guidelines.
8.11
The Equal Opportunity for Women in the Workplace Agency has received
calls from business requesting information on compliance with the intention of
applying for government business.[7]
8.12
One example of parties from which services were procured was the
Commonwealth Attorney General’s Department. The Victorian Bar stated that
Attorney-General’s would not provide its Equal Opportunity Committee with
information on the briefing arrangements in relation to male/female number of
briefs and fees.[8] The Victorian Bar
indicated that there may be a bias towards males in government contracts,
although it acknowledged many variables such as seniority, expertise and the
tendency for women to brief in areas of welfare and child protection matters
would influence the awarding of briefs.[9]
8.13
The Australian Women Lawyers found that junior females received on
average 1.4 hours for a brief while for men the average was 223 hours. The
Victorian Bar pointed out that:
… women receive a higher proportion of government briefs than
their representation at the Bar, they receive a significantly lower proportion
of fees for that work.[10]
8.14
The transparency and accountability requirements on Commonwealth
departments are not sufficient to enable a peak industry body to obtain
aggregated data for research. The Procurement Coordinator ought to investigate,
as a matter of urgency, the adequacy of practical implementation of the
procurement guidelines to ensure that the outcome meets the equal remuneration
criteria.
Recommendation 33 |
|
That the Government require the Procurement Coordinator
monitor the application of the Commonwealth Procurement Guidelines by
agencies to ensure that firms that are not compliant with relevant pay equity
principles are not eligible for Commonwealth contracts. |
8.15
The annual reports of departments should include information on
implementation of the Procurement Guidelines which would contain the type of
data discussed above.
8.16
This approach should be acceptable by and provide valuable information
to the business community:
The UK Equalities Review found that there was evidence that
using procurement to promote equality in employment is generally accepted by
the business community to be a sensible approach for government to take further
that requiring suppliers to follow sound equity principles could have a
profound impact.[11]
8.17
The Victorian Government has found the use of purchasing power for law
firms has increased the amount of work received by women.[12]
Recommendation 34 |
|
That the Procurement Coordinator investigate, as a matter of
urgency, the adequacy of practical implementation of the Procurement
Guidelines to ensure that the outcome meets relevant pay equity principles. |
8.18
In the United States of America, there have been consecutive Executive
Orders applying affirmative action principles to federal procurement policy
aimed at promoting substantive equality through access to government contracts
for female owned businesses. However, the policy has been restricted to a
narrow range of industries in which women are considered to be under-represented
and criticised for taking too narrow an approach to measuring
under-representation. The women’s procurement program created by Congress in
2000 mandates a five per cent contracting goal for women owned small business,
but according to media reports, agencies continue to fall short of that target.[13]
The lesson from the US may be that, even where affirmative action principles
are applied, it must be crafted in a way that does not entrench inequality.
While this approach has not been recommended, it represents another method of
application that the Government may wish to consider.
Industry assistance
8.19
Industry assistance provides an additional avenue for government to
insist on compliance with pay equity principles. This is increasingly important
in the light of recent government initiatives to assist small and medium
businesses.[14] Countries receiving aid
from Australia are required to have a gender equality plan and this principle
should also be implemented within Australia.
8.20
Some industry assistance is provided subsequent to compliance of the
recipients with the Equal Opportunity for Women in the Workplace Act 1999.
The Government should take steps to ensure that the same conditions apply in
relation to pay equity principles. Further, given the importance of the
systemic application of the pay equity principles, the Government should revise
its current list of applicable industry assistance to ensure that all
appropriate forms of industry assistance are included.
8.21
Accordingly, the Committee recommends:
Recommendation 35 |
|
That Government ensure that industry assistance is only
provided to firms that are compliant with pay equity principles and that the
outcome of the assisted program is compliant with the pay equity principles. |
Recommendation 36 |
|
That the Government revise the current list of industry
assistance programs to ensure that a compliance requirement with pay equity
principles is applied to all appropriate funding allocations. |
Promoting pay equity through the federal grants power
8.22
Section 96 of the Constitution provides the Commonwealth Parliament with
the power to ‘grant financial assistance to any State on such terms and
conditions as the Commonwealth thinks fit’. The application of section 96 is
extremely broad, and, has enabled the Commonwealth to spend to influence
policy, and direct activities in areas of state jurisdiction that it has no
constitutional power to effect directly.
8.23
A grant may:
n require the State to
apply the money to a general or specified purpose;[15]
n be left to the
discretion of a Federal Minister (and paid periodically);
n be provided on
condition the State matches the grant with contribution from its own funds;[16] or
n require the State to
pay the money to a designated class of beneficiaries to fulfil a purpose pursued
by the Commonwealth.[17]
8.24
The Commonwealth may, if it chooses, also bypass the states altogether
and provide funds directly to a recipient organisation operating in areas of state
jurisdiction.[18]
8.25
Through the use of special purpose grants the Commonwealth is active in
healthcare, schools, skills and workforce development, disabilities services;
and affordable housing. It provides funds to local government and private
schools through the states. The National Foundation for Australian Women
suggested that funding to rural entities be made contingent on improved board
diversity.[19]
8.26
A state may not be coerced into accepting a grant (legally speaking) but
any state that accepts a grant of financial assistance must abide by the terms
and conditions attached to the grant.[20] Given the opportunity to
impose terms and conditions on states that accept Commonwealth funds, the
question arises as to whether s.96 grants offer a practical and effective
mechanism through which to implement pay equity goals.
8.27
Section 96 enables the Commonwealth to influence policy; direct the way
a service is delivered working with and through the states as partners or
agents in the expenditure of public funds to fulfil Commonwealth purposes.
8.28
Technically speaking, the application of s. 96 is extremely broad and
enables the Commonwealth to impose ‘terms and conditions as it thinks fit’.[21]
However, there are practical and political considerations that suggest this
approach may only be employed with significant support from the states. There
are also some potential conflicts that might arise if a term of a s.96 grant
conflicts with a state based industrial instrument.
Commonwealth use of prescriptive funding
8.29
In 2007, the states ‘reacted furiously to the federal government tying
university funding to the use of Australian workplace agreements …’.[22] Under the new Intergovernmental
Agreement on Federal Financial Relations (08-09) the Commonwealth has moved
away from prescriptive terms and conditions to sectoral funding with agreed
objectives and performance outputs.[23] It was against the
background of increasingly prescriptive tied grants that the Government has
launched its new policy of cooperative federalism.
8.30
Some commentators suggest, however, that while this has the appearance
of respecting greater State independence, in fact, negotiated targets and
outcomes will be every bit as prescriptive in achieving agreed national goals.
Some bilateral agreements, for example, in vocational education and training,
include very specific targets. Pay equity could be incorporated as a mutually
agreed objective and become a performance measure with future incentive
payments dependent on achieving certain pay equity outcomes. The feasibility
and efficacy of this option require furthers investigation and discussion.
8.31
Fitting a pay equity requirement into such a complex set of vertical and
horizontal relationships involving a plethora of parties raises a range of
potential difficulties. The direct or ultimate recipients of Commonwealth funds
are likely to be a wide range of legal entities being both employers and
conduits for funds to other organisations. State governments and local councils
are employers and grantors of funds to private and not for profit entities that
deliver goods and services and perform public functions. The mechanisms by
which this approach could be implemented would require consultation on a number
of matters:
n How would a legally
binding pay equity obligation under a grant agreement intersect with the
binding obligations of employers (public and private) under existing federal
and state industrial relations laws?
n Would specific pay
rates be a term of subsequent state funding agreements?
n How would states
report on progress? Would this involve data reporting obligations for recipients
of Commonwealth funds?
n How would a conflict
between a pay equity goal or specific rate of pay and a state based wage/pay
equity determination be resolved?
8.32
Some recipients of funds under s. 96 grants rely solely on Commonwealth
funds while others rely on a mix of state and Commonwealth monies, other
private earnings, bequests and donations and grants from domestic and foreign
philanthropic bodies. A pay rate that reflects a Commonwealth priority,
especially where it forms a small part of revenue, may be opposed by employers
and the level at which additional funding would be provided needs further
consideration.
Grants versus Referral of Powers
8.33
The inclusion of pay equity goals or specific targets would have to be
negotiated through COAG and would be relevant across a range of sectors and
involve a multitude of actors with ministerial councils potentially taking
different views on the priority of pay equity as compared to other sectoral
goals.
8.34
If the Commonwealth is currently engaging the states in discussion on
referral of industrial relations systems, negotiations on pay equity in s.96
grants might add disproportionate complexity to any expected outcomes. South
Australia and Victoria have already referred their industrial relations powers
to the Commonwealth. Similarly, if the states agreement to uniform or
complementary pay equity legislation is a key objective, making the case for
specific goals and targets in s.96 grants might appear excessive in addition to
being practically difficult to implement.
Further measures
Taxation
8.35
The Government is currently undertaking a review of the taxation system
which should include issues in relation to the effective marginal tax rates for
women on pension and income support benefits that also work or want to work.
The Industry Super Network has put a proposal to the government in which a
‘worker on $30 000 – or half of average weekly earnings – would have their
retirement savings increased by about $32 000 in today’s dollars.’[24]
As the majority of Australia’s low income earners are women, there are a number
of aspects of the current taxation system that could be adjusted to address the
pay equity issues.
Superannuation and retirement savings
8.36
One key issue is that many women already in the workforce, generally in
low social economic backgrounds, are missing out on the benefits of superannuation.[25]
Reform of the current superannuation system is an important issue because of
the lack of recognition of unpaid caring work.[26]
… women have significantly less money saved for their
retirement – half of all women aged 45 to 59 have $8000 or less in their
superannuation funds, compared to $31,000 for men.[27]
8.37
Women’s lower superannuation accumulation compared to men is the
‘culmination of the many factors of disadvantage’[28]
such as interruptions to paid employment due to child bearing, child rearing
and caring responsibilities:
Women’s chances of accumulating good superannuation reserves
are often low because they experience more broken work patterns, spend fewer
years in full time paid work, earn lower wages and have greater responsibility
for unpaid work than their male counterparts.[29]
8.38
The National Foundation for Australian Women observed:
Outcomes will improve as the compulsory super system matures,
however, this does not address the core gender disparity. On the basis of
current balances and average income of those aged 35-44 and the assumption of
only compulsory super contribution being made, the average payout for a male
aged 60 would be $183 000 for a female it would be only $93 000 – half that of
the male.[30]
8.39
Suggested changes relate to taxation policies, parental leave entitlements,
superannuation policies, promotional activities to encourage women to
participate in higher paid labour markets, child care strategies and the
provision of financial training for older women.
8.40
The Australian Maritime Officers Union called for gender analysis of a
number of government programs in recognition of the fact that women live longer
than men and therefore require more superannuation.[31]
Unions collectively called for a number of changes:
n increasing minimum
contributions to a goal of 15%, which can be achieved through bargaining or
legislation;
n reducing the
contribution tax including removal of the tax on incomes of less than $70,000
per annum;
n restructuring
superannuation taxes to provide greater equity;
n extending the
entitlement of Superannuation Guarantee to all workers, irrespective of age or
minimum earnings;
n fully disclosing all
fees and charges, together with a ban on entry and exit fees and commissions
charged on Superannuation Guarantee contributions; and
n equal treatment of
same sex couples in the allocation of superannuation benefits.[32]
8.41
The Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia Ltd Research Centre
attributed the low levels of superannuation funds for women ‘to a
disinclination to sacrifice current spending for future savings, as well as a
lack of surplus discretionary income’.[33] Increasing access to
superannuation would increase its relevance and serve an educative function for
young women about financial security.[34] In support of concerns
that young women lack the opportunity and knowledge relating to access
arrangements that promote financial security, it was observed that salary
sacrificing was higher for men than women in all industries except
accommodation, cafes and restaurant:
Table 8.1 Salary Sacrifice (2006) EEH
|
Female
|
Male
|
|
% salary sacrificing
|
% sacrificed by those
sacrificing
|
% sacrificed all adult
employees
|
% salary sacrificing
|
% sacrificed by those
sacrificing
|
% sacrificed all adult
employees
|
Mining
|
20.3
|
11.8
|
3.0
|
32.4
|
13.3
|
5.0
|
Manufacturing
|
10.6
|
11.0
|
1.9
|
16.2
|
12.1
|
2.8
|
Electricity, Gas & Water
|
34.5
|
6.1
|
2.4
|
44.2
|
11.8
|
6.0
|
Construction
|
6.2
|
13.8
|
1.2
|
9.2
|
15.0
|
2.1
|
Wholesale Trade
|
6.2
|
10.1
|
1.0
|
12.7
|
13.0
|
2.5
|
Retail Trade
|
2.9
|
14.4
|
0.7
|
5.3
|
11.8
|
1.0
|
Accom. Cafes & Rest.
|
3.7
|
16.7
|
1.0
|
1.6
|
7.1
|
0.2
|
Transport & Storage
|
9.6
|
12.7
|
1.6
|
12.1
|
12.2
|
2.2
|
Communication Services
|
24.7
|
15.0
|
5.6
|
32.1
|
18.6
|
8.1
|
Finance & Insurance
|
15.4
|
11.9
|
2.4
|
33.1
|
12.0
|
5.5
|
Property & Bus. Services
|
7.9
|
22.3
|
2.8
|
11.3
|
18.5
|
3.1
|
Govt. Admin & Defence
|
9.7
|
12.9
|
1.6
|
17.5
|
13.8
|
3.2
|
Education
|
21.3
|
13.0
|
3.8
|
34.9
|
14.2
|
6.8
|
Health & Comm Services
|
26.5
|
24.5
|
8.7
|
37.5
|
20.9
|
9.9
|
Cultural & Rec Services
|
5.6
|
19.5
|
2.0
|
6.3
|
13.4
|
1.7
|
Personal & Other Services
|
10.2
|
13.9
|
2.1
|
18.4
|
17.5
|
4.2
|
Total All Industries
|
13.7
|
17.8
|
3.6
|
16.0
|
14.7
|
3.5
|
Source Department
of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs, 2008, Gender
Earning differentials in Australia: A statistical overview of women’s earnings, unpublished,
p. 26
8.42
A review of superannuation law in Australia is required to ensure that
women are not disadvantaged. One such review is scheduled three years after the
commencement of the Fair Work Act 2009.
8.43
A significant gap exists between superannuation payouts to women and
men. Women tend to take time out of the workforce and change jobs and careers.[35]
The CPSU suggested that government fund a public program to provide women with
information about financial literacy.[36]
8.44
Security for Women commented that:
… for women in particular, part time workforce attachment
adversely impacts on immediate income level, on their potential career
advancement to more senior and better paid positions, and thus impacts on the
likelihood of poverty in retirement, due to reduced capacity to make adequate
superannuation provisions.[37]
8.45
The ACT Council of Social Services (ACTCOSS) added that:
Disadvantage in the area of superannuation is particularly
acute for women from culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds
or Indigenous women. Unemployment rates are higher for women from a CALD
background and those in employment are more likely to work in manual, unskilled
jobs with fewer entitlements than other occupations. The likelihood of these
women receiving any superannuation benefit is very low. Aboriginal women also suffer from underemployment and
unemployment and rarely have the opportunity to accumulate superannuation.
Initiatives such as the ASIC facts sheet Super and Us Mob are positive but we suggest more should be
done to ensure Indigenous people and people from a CALD background are not
disadvantaged in building retirement savings.[38]
8.46
The gap between the superannuation levels of men and women largely
reflects the pattern of women’s working lives but has decreased since the
introduction of the superannuation guarantee.[39]
Superannuation Guarantee
8.47
Section 19 of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration)
Act 1992 refers to individual superannuation guarantee shortfalls and
requires that a charge of nine per cent of total salary or wages be paid by the
employer.
8.48
Section 27 in relation to Salary and Wages: General Exclusions states
that:
(2) If an employer pays an employee less than $450 by way of
salary or wages in a month, the salary or wages so paid are not to be taken
into account for the purpose of making a calculation, in relation to the
employer and the employee, under Section 19.
8.49
A higher number of women engage in part-time and casual employment than
men and the resulting absence of the superannuation guarantee falls
disproportionately on women.
8.50
ACTCOSS observed that:
… women whose total earnings will exceed $450 per month, and
work for several different employers, with no job individually reaching the
$450 benchmark … [will receive] no superannuation. Similarly, women who are not
in the paid workforce or who are registered as unemployed or on government
benefits are not entitled to superannuation, and most have no independent
retirement savings at all.[40]
8.51
The Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees added that:
Workers who miss out on compulsory superannuation also miss
out on the benefits of default basic death and disability cover as well as the
opportunity to increase their level of low-cost insurance.[41]
8.52
The benefits of the abolition of the $450 threshold on these women would
include the improvement of retirement incomes, access to cost-effective
insurance and the opportunity to benefit from the co-contribution scheme; and
improvements to the savings behaviour of women.[42]
This will also have an educative value as research has shown that participants
in the Co-contribution scheme are ‘generally committed to continuing and view
their contribution as an essential household expense.’[43]
8.53
In addition employers benefit through the retention of qualified and
experienced employees to grow their business as women will be encouraged to
remain in the workforce through having the opportunity to qualify for the
superannuation guarantee and the opportunity to make voluntary contributions.[44]
The Treasury advised the Committee that:
In 2007-08, there were 2.25 million jobs which paid less than
the daily equivalent of $450 per month. This covers 18.1 million employee
months at an average of $173 per month.[45]
8.54
There were 522 000 people in this group who had only one job and of
these 53 per cent were paid the superannuation guarantee notwithstanding the
available exemption. Further, Treasury advised that in relation to these
employees, superannuation was paid on 63 per cent of these wages.[46]
8.55
There were also 240 000 employees who worked in several jobs but none
paying over $450 monthly and 1.5 million who had a job that paid more than $450
per month.[47]
8.56
The National Tertiary Education Industry Union (NTEU) commented that:
It would be more equitable to require payment of the
Superannuation Guarantee to all workers, thereby covering those casuals who
have very limited hours of work, or who have their hours spread across more
than one employer.[48]
8.57
The ACTU observed that removing the $450 a month exemption would have an
impact on superannuation retirement incomes.[49]
Low income earners have as much need as other workers to
accumulate retirement savings. In industries where working for several employers
in common, such as retail, hospitality and nursing, many employers are excluded
from the Superannuation Guarantee system by the fact that the $450 threshold
applies only to a single employer, and not on a combined income level. For
employers, the exemption creates a distortion in incentives for employers,
because it can involve comparatively high cost of employment of workers
marginally above the threshold.[50]
8.58
In 2002 the Senate Select Committee on Superannuation recommended the
abolition of the $450 exemption threshold but this was not accepted by the then
government. The Senate Committee pointed out that at the time it was introduced
‘the $450 contribution threshold was necessary as a transitional arrangement’
when compulsory employers contribution and the proportion of part time and
casual workers were relatively lower.[51]
8.59
As workers can now nominate the superannuation fund of their choice, most
will already have a super fund.
8.60
In terms of the impact of removing the $450 threshold:
Modelling by Access Economics shows that the aggregate impact
of this measure is small, resulting in a total superannuation assets 2010 –
2041 being 0.326% higher than if no policy change was implemented. However,
industry experience suggests it is likely to be quite concentrated, resulting
in significant improvements for those individual workers who are most
disadvantaged by the current exemption. The modelling supports this intuition,
with distributional analysis estimating the adequacy benefit is concentrated
among low income earners.[52]
8.61
Further, the report found that the cost to government would only be
0.003 per cent of GDP in 2041 and the submission recommends a review of the
$450 per month exemption.[53]
8.62
In May 2009, the Review Panel on Australia’s Future Taxation System
released a report on strategic issues for the retirement income system.[54]
The Henry Review discussion paper on the strategic issues in relation to
retirement income system suggested retaining the $450 threshold exemption.[55]
8.63
In evidence to the Committee, Treasury commented that companies such as
Myer already pay those earning less than $450 a month the relevant amount of
superannuation as a matter of policy ‘because it actually makes their pay
system easier to manage’.[56] The Australian Institute
of Superannuation Trustees commented that:
we are aware in some industries and for some employers it is
deemed to be more costly to try to segregate those people who fall under the
threshold than it would be to pay nine per cent for everybody … and the vast
majority of people who might fall under that threshold or bubble over that
threshold would probably already have an account somewhere in the system. In
relation to the administration in the funds, it is more a question of
identifying the appropriate account to make that contribution to.[57]
8.64
Treasury argued, however, that the difference between the productivity
gap and the rate of real wage increases in the 1990s appears to be the funding
of the superannuation guarantee and was of the view that:
although the legal incidence of these payments may be on
employers, the economic incidence of the superannuation guarantee is on
employees.[58]
8.65
The majority of employers are paying the superannuation guarantee even
though not required by law. Employers therefore recognise that it is preferable
to do so because it is administratively simpler or it is the fair thing to do
or to promote good employee relationship or all of these. It can be assumed
that some of the employers not paying the superannuation guarantee do so because
it is government policy and are not aware that it may not be business best
practice. This is a case where an antiquated government policy no longer
reflects current market practices.
8.66
Given the increase in the proportion of part time and casual employees,
a large proportion of these are women, and the technical advances in automation
of business accounting systems and the extent of community awareness and in
line with government’s policy of increasing participation in the workforce and
decreasing unemployment, workers on lower incomes should receive the same
superannuation entitlements as other workers.
Recommendation 37 |
|
That the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act
1992 be amended to remove the exemption from the payment of the 9 per
cent charge for employees who earn less than $450 per month and that the
required superannuation contributions be paid for all employees into a
designated or approved superannuation fund of their choice |
8.67
Other categories of employees for whom employers are exempted from
paying a superannuation contribution that require consideration are the
extension of the superannuation guarantee to maternity leave, those over 70
years of age and those under 18 years who work less than 30 hours per week.
8.68
The Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees strongly supported the view that the paid maternity scheme should have a superannuation component.[59]
The example was given of women who ‘enjoy parity and promotional parity with
their male counterparts’, however, Captain Carmen Blanco explained that the
requirement to spend long periods at sea limited the career capacity and
impacted on other matters such as superannuation:
Superannuation is built up over an entire career, and
currently when a parent is out of the workforce during unpaid maternity or
paternity leave a very paltry amount of superannuation is allowed to be paid on
their behalf by the working spouse, certainly not equivalent to the amount they
would have been able to contribute if they were still in the workforce. If the
person is a sole parent then there will be no payments during the time taken
for parental leave. Considering the rate of divorce and the longer life
expectancy of women, this is certainly going to lead to inequity between the
sexes in retirement (Clare 2001), women are currently arriving at retirement
with an equivalent of 20 years less savings than men.[60]
8.69
In particular, in the light of the move in retirement age to 67 years
and the projected increase in the number of people working past retirement, there
is a need to review the exemption for those over 70 years of age. Women leave
the workforce earlier than men and the availability of the superannuation
guarantee may provide further encouragement for women to remain in the labour
market longer.
8.70
Workers not receiving an employer superannuation contribution, carers
and people in the unpaid workforce are not eligible to benefit from the
Government’s Co-contribution scheme.[61] The Australian Institute
of Superannuation Trustees commented that the Co-contribution scheme had been
predominantly taken up by older people as young families do not have the
disposable income to participate in the program.[62]
The uptake of the Co-contribution scheme by women has increased their
superannuation savings but the Australian Human Rights Commission suggested
that this be extended to carer payments as well.[63]
Recommendation 38 |
|
That the Government broaden the scope of the Superannuation Co-contribution scheme to include all low income earners. |
Portability of superannuation
8.71
The Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees suggested
that use of existing superannuation funds for payment of employer contributions
would be the most cost effective way to proceed.[64]
Ausfund boasts that it has low fees and charges; efficient administration
services; and a history of strong investment returns. Accordingly this or a
similar fund may provide a suitable repository for the superannuation funds.
Recommendation 39 |
|
That the Government establish a superannuation fund or
modify Ausfund to be an available fund for the receipt of monies on behalf of
these employees who earn less than $450 with any employer to reduce the
likelihood of multiple administration costs charged to workers with multiple
employers. |
Portable long service leave
8.72
Portable long service leave is important for women because of the breaks
for family responsibilities. The construction and cleaning industries in the
ACT now have portable long service leave. The community services industries in
the ACT are also working on this approach.[65] The Australian Services
Union suggested that:
… portable long service leave be introduced to alleviate the
loss of this entitlement to women due to the nature of their work, and in
particular those sectors funded by the government be encouraged to support and
provide portable long service leave.[66]
8.73
Recruitment and Consulting Services Association provided an example of
an on-hired employee who has been with an agency for several years and who may
have worked on 20 different assignments. RCSA raised the possibility of
portable annual, sick and paid carers leave provided it was done efficiently
and administered properly:
Is there not an opportunity to start looking at a hybrid
between casual and permanent employment whereby, after a period of time, you
can start accruing; maybe a smaller percentage, but at least nominate to accrue
or trade off part of your casual loading towards accruing annual leave, sick
leave and paid carers leave entitlements?[67]
8.74
RCSA speculated that possibly 30 per cent of eligible women would take
up the opportunity of portable leave arrangements.[68]
Four per cent of the workforce is on-hire and 15 per cent are independent
contractors.[69] There is a low level of
unionisation for on-hire employees because of the diversity of work they
undertake in different assignments.[70]
Recommendation 40 |
|
That the Government provide a long service leave scheme
providing portability of service for workers, together with an equitable
application of long service leave contributions by employers in appropriate
industries. |
Office of Status of Women
8.75
The Office of Women has established a Women’s Interdepartmental
Committee to direct whole of government engagement in the pursuit of gender
equality. The following agencies are represented at SES level: Attorney-General's
Department; Australian Bureau of Statistics; Australian Public Service
Commission; Australian Agency for International Development; Department of
Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry; Department of Defence; Department of
Education, Employment and Workplace Relations; Department of Families, Housing,
Community Services and Indigenous Affairs and Office for Women; Department of
Finance and Deregulation; Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade; Department
of Health and Ageing; Department of Human Services; Department of Immigration
and Citizenship; Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development
and Local Government; Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research;
Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet and The Treasury.
8.76
The role of the Women’s IDC is to lead whole of government progress and
advice on:
n Progress on the
Australian government’s priorities for gender equality, including advice on barriers
to improved outcomes and how they can be addressed.
n Options to improve
the extent to which gender issues are taken into account in the development,
implementation and evaluation of government policies and programs within
portfolios and across government.
n Gender equality
outcomes in the Australian Public Service particularly in operations and
employment outcomes and how these could be improved.
n Australian Government
actions in the context of leading other governments, business and the broader
community to improve outcomes for Australian women, and women internationally.
n Other issues as
required, from time to time by the Minister for the Status of Women and other
Ministers of the Australian Government.
n The effectiveness of
this Inter Departmental Committee in achieving its intent, through reports to
the Minister for the Status of Women, the Secretary of FaHCSIA, and the
Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, including an independent
assessment of effectiveness and a final report to the Minister by October 2010.[71]
8.77
The IDC has 3 working groups
n Economic Security Working
Group
n Gender Equality
Working Group
n National Plan Working
Group
8.78
The whole of government character of the Women’s IDC and focus of the
Office of Women support its relocation within the Department of Prime Minister
and Cabinet. While the current location in the Department of Family and
Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs provides an important link
with the services provided by that Department, this change would provide greater
assurance of a whole of government approach.
8.79
Given the importance of the key policies over a number of portfolios,
moving the Office of Women to the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet
would facilitate a whole of government approach.
8.80
The Australian Institute of Management Victoria and Tasmania added that
having the increased profile of the Prime Minister would demonstrate the
importance of this issue.[72]
8.81
The Office for Work and Family is situated in the Department of Prime
Minister and Cabinet and has announced a $12 million program for small
businesses to implement approaches that assist employees balance work and
family obligations.[73] The co-location of the
two offices would provide additional benefits in coordination of policy
initiatives.
Recommendation 41 |
|
That the Office for Women be located within the Department
of Prime Minister and Cabinet. |
8.82
The Office for Women currently holds gender Pay Equity Roundtables which
are attended by representatives from academia, National Women’s Secretariats, state
and federal government departments and unions.[74] The Committee commends
the Office for Women on this initiative and would like to see these continue
within the whole of government context within the Department of Prime Minister
and Cabinet.
8.83
The regulatory impact statements accompanying all relevant Cabinet
submissions should contain comment on the impact of the proposal on pay equity
as part of the broader social impact assessment. Locating the Office of Women
within the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet would ensure that it is
central to the development of key policy initiatives.
Recommendation 42 |
|
That all relevant Cabinet submissions be accompanied by an
analysis of the potential impact of the proposal on pay equity in Australia. |
Ministerial report to Parliament
8.84
The Minister for Status of Women should provide, in addition to the
current report on Women in Australia, an annual statement to the
Parliament providing a progress report on pay equity and other issues relevant
to improving women’s economic and financial independence. The statement should
be made on or as near as possible to women’s pay equity day to emphasise the
importance of this to the wider community.
Recommendation 43 |
|
That the Minister for the Status of Women provide an annual
statement to Parliament on Australia’s progress in improving women’s economic
and financial independence which includes an analysis of the pay equity
situation in Australia. |
APS departments and agencies
8.85
Under the proposed arrangements for a Pay Equity Unit within Fair Work
Australia, government agencies will be required to undertake pay equity audits
and develop a pay equity strategy. Therefore, the incorporation of a brief
report on pay equity strategies and outcomes in annual reports to Parliament
will provide additional accountability. This will enable Senate and House of
Representatives committees to initiate inquiries into any matters arising.
Recommendation 44 |
|
That the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet amend the
‘Requirements for Annual Reports for Departments, Executive Agencies and FMA
ACT bodies’, Section 12 (3) Management of Human Resources (b), the word
‘gender’ to read ‘gender including pay equity issues’ for the preparation of
annual report to Parliament. |
8.86
Further, the Australian Public Service Commission should provide
information on pay equity issues in its State of the Service reports. Agencies
now operate under enterprise bargaining and individual agreement making
arrangements with no central underpinning classification framework. This has
resulted in disparity within organisations and between organisations on the
basis of gender.
Recommendation 45 |
|
That the Australian Public Service Commission be required to
report on gender pay gap in the Australian Public Service in the annual State
of the Service reports. |
8.87
Wage gains on average in the public sector have been greater than in the
private sector this decade.[75] Women comprise 57 per
cent of Australian Public Service (APS) employees.[76]
The median remuneration for women is lower than that for men at all levels
except the APS4 level and attributed this to longer median lengths of service
for males.[77] The longer service of
males was attributed to slower promotion rates, the recent recruitment of a
greater number of women and the interruption of women’s service because of
family commitments.[78]
8.88
In the Australian Public Service wages are set by collective agreements
and salaries are linked to classifications which contain a number of increment
points and remuneration levels are dependent on the ‘size and nature and the
labour market in which the various agencies operate and their funding
arrangements.[79]
8.89
Women in the APS are employed in the lowest-paying agencies, and in the
lower levels of those agencies which the CPSU attributed to the underevaluation
of the work in these agencies and ongoing fiscal constraints.[80]
The CPSU believed this reflect the way government values work and not about
productivity.[81]
8.90
The CPSU argued that there are substantial costs involved in the
development of separate agency collective agreements and the return to a single
pay structure has the potential to address a number of pay equity issues within
the public sector as well as potential savings.[82]
The development of a framework to promote collective bargaining, equality, participation,
flexibility and mobility’ could start to address some of the pay inequity
evident in the APS.[83]
8.91
The 3 September 2009, the Prime Minister, the Hon Kevin Rudd MP,
announced an Advisory Group on Reform Government Administration is considering
the performance of the public services including the efficiency in all aspects
of government operations. According the Committee recommends:
Recommendation 46 |
|
That the government incorporate in the current review of the
Australian Public Service the adequacy of the current collective agreement
wage setting processes to meet pay equity principles required under
Australia’s international obligations. |
Gender equality scheme
8.92
Under the model operating in the United Kingdom, all public authorities
are required:
n to prepare and
publish a gender equality scheme;
n to consider the need
to include objectives to address the causes of any gender pay gap;
n to gather and use
information on how the public authority’s policies and practices affect gender
equality in the workforce and in the delivery of services;
n to consult
stakeholders in order to determine gender equality objectives;
n to assess the impact
of the authority’s current and proposed policies and practices;
n to implement the
actions set out in the authority’s scheme within 3 years, unless it is
unreasonable or impracticable to do so; and
n to report against the
scheme every year and review every three years.[84]
8.93
It is appropriate that in addition to the public sector agencies
attention to pay equity principles in relation to employees that this
consideration should also extend to the implementation of government policies
and programs. Accordingly the Committee recommends:
Recommendation 47 |
|
That all government agencies and authorities be required to
implement a gender equality scheme and to report on policies and practices in
the delivery of services. |
Code of Practice
8.94
The United Kingdom has an Equal Pay Act 1979 which includes an
objective of pay equity and the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 which relates
to equal remuneration.[85] In 1997, a Code of
Practice on Equal Pay came into force which provides guidance on the
application of pay equity but has limited compliance due to the voluntary
nature.[86]
In the UK codes of practice have also been used to good
effect. The UK Equal Opportunities Commission has developed a Code of
Practice on Equal Pay
for employers. That Code sets out the practical obligations of
employers in respect of the laws of the European Union and the United Kingdom.[87]
8.95
Code of Practice on Equal Pay serves as a guide for the application of
pay equity, based on a series of practices derived from court rulings. The Code
outlines the five stages to be followed in order to carry out a pay review on a
voluntary basis:
(i) decision on the scope of the
review and identify the required data. The employer may select which jobs are
to be compared and which are not. The employer may decide to include or exclude
employee representatives;
(ii) determination of equal jobs
and those of equal value. The employer is free to choose the method s/he
considers fit, and that may or may not rely on a job evaluation method;
(iii) gathering of data on wages
in order to identify the pay gaps. It is specified that only significant pay
gaps should be considered;
(iv)
identification of the objective causes of any significant pay gap; and
(v) formulation
of a plan of action and follow-up.[88]
8.96
In 2006, an International Labour Organisation Working Paper criticised
the British model on the basis that the model ‘focuses more on the
establishment of non-discriminatory pay practices than on the elimination of
the pay gaps themselves; more on achieving equal opportunities rather than
equal results’.[89]
8.97
A Code of Practice is not necessary in the Australian context in
addition to the measures already recommended in this report.