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Working justice and the will of God

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Title: Working justice and the will of God


1
Working justice and the will of God
  • Rev. Dr. Ann Wansbrough
  • UnitingCare NSW.ACT

2
  • This presentation was delivered at the Public
    Briefing
  • The New Industrial Relations Agenda
  • organised by Monash University and the University
    of Western Australia
  • Carillion Room, Sofitel Melbourne
  • http//www.conferences.monash.org/industrialrelati
    ons/
  • http//www.monash.edu.au/news/newsline/story/643
  • Monday 24 October 2005

3
Working justice and the will of God
  • In the just reward of labour,
  • Gods will is done
  • In the help we give our neighbour,
  • Gods will is done
  • (Frederick Pratt Green Together in Song Hymn 168
    verse 2a)

4
  • God has told you O mortal what is good and what
    does the Lord require of you but to do justice,
    and to love kindness and to walk humbly with your
    God.
  • (Micah 68 NRSV)

5
Ecumenical concerns
6
14 member churches of National Council of
Churches 1999
  • Changes to workplace relations are no panacea for
    unemployment, and will not, on their own, create
    more jobs at better pay.
  • (A covenant for employment)

7
National Council of Churches 1999
  • What is needed is
  • A political commitment to full employment
  • Within a framework set by human rights
    obligations
  • Right of low paid workers not merely to a safety
    net but to fair and just remuneration and
    conditions of work that take account of family
    and other responsibilities
  • Strategy of employment creation
  • Labour market programs eg training

8
Should the churches participate in the debate?
9
Should the churches participate in the debate?
  • Concept of work in religious belief
  • Church as employer
  • Pastoral responsibility
  • Jobs Network
  • Democracy
  • Reject ad hominem argument
  • Evidence and argument (discourse ethics)
  • Onus on government

10
What shapes the Christian critique?
  • Church as Employer experience
  • Human rights
  • Christian belief

11
Church as Employer
12
Uniting Church
  • Church as Employer principles
  • Just wages and conditions
  • Opposed to erosion of awards
  • Importance of adequate standard for local
    management committees to use
  • Cooperation with unions

13
  • WorkChoice issues include
  • How to ensure justice for church employees,
    especially those in community services
  • Tension between purpose (eg care of people) and
    responsibility to those who provide the care
  • Funding issues for community services when awards
    are merely safety net, not real payable rates and
    conditions
  • HR management quality control at local level when
    legal standards eroded awards, unfair dismissal
  • Some of what church thinks appropriate may be
    prohibited

14
Human rights
15
Human rights
  • Ratified by Australia
  • Common ground in public discourse
  • Universal, indivisible, inalienable

16
Human rights
  • Work for all who want it
  • Just and favourable remuneration and conditions
  • Equal pay for equal work
  • Trade unions
  • Rest, leisure and reasonable limitation of
    working hours and periodic holidays with pay, as
    well as remuneration for public holidays

17
  • Occupation health and safety
  • Right to family assistance
  • Right to adequate standard of living for oneself
    and ones family and its continuous improvement
  • Equality of women
  • ILO 1948
  • Right to association
  • Collective bargaining not merely another choice
  • Right to strike

18
  • Human rights universal, indivisible,
    inalienable

19
  • WorkChoices issues
  • Work for all who want it (maybe) but at what
    pay rate and under what conditions?
  • AWAs encouraged ahead of collective agreements
    contrary to concept of equal pay depend on
    negotiating power
  • Australian Fair Pay and Conditions Standard is
    minimalist
  • Rest, leisure and working hours and safety - at
    risk when awards can be overridden

20
  • WorkChoices Issues
  • Freedom of association turned into freedom from
    association
  • Union activity restrained
  • Right to take industrial action so restrained it
    effectively disappears

21
Christian beliefs
22
  • Themes of Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament)
  • God liberates from exploitation and slavery
  • Ten commandments as response to liberation
  • You shall not steal their labour or their time
  • You shall not covet

23
  • God has a bias towards and on behalf of the poor
  • Biblical and Patristic tradition
  • Wesley
  • Booth
  • Catholic Social Teaching

24
  • What are effects of WorkChoices on the poor, both
  • those excluded from the workforce and
  • the lowest paid workers with least negotiating
    power?
  • These two groups may not be set against one
    another

25
  • Themes in Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament) 2
  • God condemns those who are rich at the expense of
    the poor
  • Workers must be treated properly
  • National wellbeing depends on justice
  • Human life flourishes when human beings nurture
    peace, the common good
  • Distributive justice

26
  • WorkChoices Issues
  • Based on view that workplace relations is about
    prosperity rather than justice (Access Economics
    report for BCA)
  • Exploitation because no clear connection between
    changes and alleged benefits such as
    productivity, higher wages, choices for workers
    and prosperity

27
  • Sin a realistic assessment of negative side of
    human life
  • Individual
  • Structural
  • Systemic
  • Temptations facing employers due to, eg
    competition, shareholder demands or greed
    (community sector lack of funding, high need)

28
  • Government is responsible to God role is to
  • Constrain sin through law (protect poor) ie
    regulate the market
  • Protect and enhance the common good (improve
    situation of the poor, prevent poverty)
  • Human rights as agreed benchmarks

29
  • Dean Drayton (President of Uniting Church)
  • Christians are called to challenge systems and
    structures that breed hate, greed, oppression,
    poverty, injustice, and fear. Anything less than
    this is a watered-down expression of faith
  • (quoted by Christopher Pearson Poverty of Church
    Ideas Weekend Australian, 22-23 October 2005)

30
  • William Booth (Founder, Salvation Army)
  • the laws of supply and demand, and all the rest
    of the excuses by which those who stand on firm
    ground salve their conscience when they let their
    brother sinkoften enough are responsible for his
    disaster. Coffin ships are a direct result of the
    wretched policy of non-interference with the
    legitimate operations of commerce.

31
  • WorkChoices fails to constrain sin
  • Encouragement for individual rather than
    collective agreements
  • AWAs will not be assessed before registration and
    will not be public documents so cannot be
    monitored or struck out valid even if entered
    into under duress

32
  • Workchoices fails to constrain sin
  • Abolition of no disadvantage test
  • Billy AWA or no job (and no Newstart allowance)
  • Workplaces gradually become award free, has to
    meet only AFPCS
  • No coercion empty rhetoric eg lockouts
    (already allowed)
  • No award protection for independent contractors

33
  • Workchoices fails to constrain sin
  • Principles for fair pay commission do not give
    priority to human rights, living wage for family
  • Principles for the fair pay commission and the
    reasons for exemptions from unfair dismissal
    laws subordinate the needs of workers to other
    agenda

34
  • Workchoices fails to constrain sin
  • Abolition of no disadvantage test agreements
    override awards
  • Awards only apply in current job, unless new
    employer chooses award
  • No unfair dismissal protection for half of
    workforce

35
  • Workchoices fails to constrain sin
  • AIRC no longer able to impose compulsory
    decisions in intractable disputes or to improve
    award conditions
  • Disputes now internal matters for voluntary
    resolution ignores power and resource
    differential
  • Lockouts already becoming longest runnig disputes

36
  • Workchoices fails to constrain sin
  • Lockouts already allowed in circumstances not
    allowed in other OECD nations (so what is duress
    or coercion?)
  • Distorted idea of the common good

37
  • Workchoices constrains goodness
  • Erodes ethical basis of workplace relations
  • Makes workplace relations a private even secret
    matter, using cooperation as excuse
  • Shifts philosophical and moral framework of the
    system
  • Change from conciliation and arbitration power to
    corporations power means loss of 100 years of
    jurisprudence that takes seriously the needs of
    workers
  • Corporations power focus on functioning in a
    commercial environment

38
  • Workchoices constrains goodness
  • Priority is agreement making at work place level
  • Awards reduced to safety net on a limited range
    of conditions which will gradually erode,
    becoming useless as justice benchmarks
  • No provision for awards for emerging industries
  • More work for small employers if they want to be
    just award will no longer be adequate guide

39
  • Workchoices constrains goodness
  • Prohibits clauses such as
  • Payment while on union training programs and paid
    union meetings
  • Remedy for unfair dismissal
  • Requiring that a future agreement must be a union
    collective agreement
  • Prohibiting AWAs
  • Mandating union involvement in dispute resolution
  • Punishes attempts to include them

40
  • Workchoices constrains goodness
  • State laws that allow industrial action will be
    overridden if someone seeks order to stop a
    particular industrial action
  • Overrides state deeming provisions for
    independent contractors awards no longer
    protect them
  • Goal is a single national system in which states
    have referred IR powers to Commonwealth

41
  • God created human beings
  • God loves human beings
  • God redeems human beings through the work of
    Christ
  • Children as gift from God
  • Human beings have absolute value

42
  • Human beings may not be used as means to ends
  • Moral value of work is different from that
    assigned by the market
  • Human beings are entitled to livelihood and
    security
  • Solidarity of human beings solidarity of
    workers
  • Value of parenting

43
  • The material, the economic, is subordinate to the
    spiritual and the social.
  • Prosperity and progress is about human wellbeing,
    a decent life with shared time for family and
    community
  • UCA genuine wealth not money but those matters
    that contribute to human wellbeing (1988 report)
  • ABS Measuring progress

44
  • Work is one of the ways people express their
    God-given human nature
  • Dignity of work
  • Livelihood
  • Value to society
  • Co-creation
  • Human labour is not a commodity wages and
    conditions must enhance human dignity and society

45
  • WorkChoices concerns
  • Wages and conditions determined by market
  • Reduced security hours, pay, conditions, unfair
    dismissal

46
  • WorkChoices Concerns
  • Loss of human dignity
  • Loss of human rights
  • Low paid workers sacrificed in name of reducing
    unemployment inappropriate and unnecessary

47
  • God is Sustainer, ie God gives life and works for
    health and wellbeing of humankind
  • Health and safety, freedom from injury, matter

48
  • WorkChoices Concerns
  • Health and safety put at risk by
  • 38 hour maximum ordinary hours averaged over year
    no maximum for day or week
  • Policies that lead to lower pay lead to longer
    hours to make a living wage
  • National system ignores interaction between
    wages, conditions and OHS
  • Longer hours mean more accidents in workplace,
    including on road, more stress

49
  • God created human beings as social beings
  • family as extended family, local community
  • shared time important Sabbath rest

50
  • WorkChoices Concerns
  • Abolition of no disadvantage test and averaging
    of maximum ordinary hours over a year means
    employers now have more flexibility to require
    employees to work any time 24/7 or public
    holidays.

51
  • Gods providence God is Provider
  • Earth and its resources as gift to be shared, not
    for exploitation by few
  • The Christian concept of justice is distributive
    justice a sharing of prosperity

52
  • WorkChoices Concerns
  • No principles to shape employers relationships
    or negotiations with employees or the responsible
    sharing of prosperity

53
  • WorkChoices Concerns
  • Access Economic report suggests any
    redistribution through tax system should not
    increase the amount available for redistribution,
    even though workplace will be unfair.

54
  • God create woman and man in Gods own image
    equality of women

55
  • WorkChoices Concerns
  • Women will be disproportionately affected by
    changes to setting of minimum wages and by
    abolition of no disadvantage test since they
    lack the same leverage in negotiation eg want
    jobs close to home, appropriate hours and
    therefore have less choice of employer
  • Problems for male workers affect womens family
    responsibilities

56
Working justice and the will of God
  • In the just reward of labour,
  • Gods will is done
  • In the help we give our neighbour,
  • Gods will is done
  • (Frederick Pratt Green Together in Song Hymn 168
    verse 2a)
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