Under an Abbott government, the Productivity Commission could be charged with overhauling workplace laws, but penalty rates will remain unchanged.
Small business hopes were once again dashed that penalty rates would be lowered as the Coalitionโs workplace relations spokesman, Eric Abetz, said yesterday there would be no legislation to change penalty rates.
According to The Australian, Abetz said penalty rates would remain the โprovince of the independent umpire, the Fair Work Commissionโ.
Executive director of COSBOA, Peter Strong, told SmartCompany penalty rates need to be changed.
โThere should be changes to penalty rates because they are too high. Weโre not saying to get rid of them, but they do need to be lowered. Currently, the rates are so high theyโre getting rid of jobs,โ Strong says.
In an interview with Sky News yesterday, opposition small business spokesman Bruce Billson avoided directly giving answers in regard to penalty rates.
โIn relation to the workplace regime, weโve said thereโs a flexibility problem. We know there is a militancy problem; that is why we want to reactivate a genuine building and construction commission. When that commission was established we saw a 10% increase in productivity in the building sector alone,โ he told Sky News.
The Australian reported Coalition sources said the Liberal Party were โactively consideringโ an in-depth investigation into the Fair Work regime to be conducted by the Productivity Commission, but major changes to the Act would be delayed until after the 2016 election.
It is thought the plan was designed to minimise a potential campaign by Labor and unions to convince voters the Coalition would bring back John Howardโs hotly debated WorkChoices regime.
Billson reiterated yesterday past Coalition comments saying WorkChoices will not come back under the Liberals.
โLook, weโve said WorkChoices is dead, buried, cremated and there is a memorial service conducted periodically when the government tries to roll out a fear campaign which is completely baseless,โ he said.
Strong says getting the Productivity Commission to review the Fair Work Act is โan interesting approachโ.
โMy immediate reaction is to support [the] Productivity Commissionโฆ We know thatโs what it should be all about, but peopleโs ideologies get in the way and often hamper productivity,โ he says.
Strong says the Coalition would delay changes to the Fair Work Act because of votersโ reactions around election time.
โI think theyโd delay that because there is an election coming. Theyโve basically said that theyโll leave it until the potential Productivity Commission report comes out I suppose,โ he says.
The establishment of a Productivity Commission review is consistent with the Liberal Partyโs view the Fair Work Act should be the responsibility of the commission rather than the three-person panel appointed by the government.
Abbott said last week he would release the industrial relations policy โsooner rather than laterโ.
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