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Australia

Education ministers face ‘massive’ teacher shortage in first meeting since federal election

Federal Education Minister Jason Clare says he and his state counterparts face “a massive challenge” to fix teacher shortages, as he meets with them for the first time today.

The first meeting of education ministers since Anthony Albanese’s election win will be attended not just by politicians but also teachers, principals and representatives from the unions and independent and Catholic school groups.

Mr Clare told ABC Radio National that classrooms were growing, but fewer teachers were available to run them.

“You have more and more kids going to school … at the same time we have seen a drop of 16 per cent of young students going into teacher training,” he said.

“There aren’t many more jobs more important than being a teacher and we just don’t have enough of them.”

The graduation rate for teachers is also far lower than for other university students, sitting at just 50 per cent compared to an average of 70 per cent for other degrees.

Mr Clare said the government had already committed to offering $40,000 bursaries to some students, but state and territory ministers will today also consider whether students and people seeking to retrain as teachers should be offered paid internships or other upfront incentives to study.

He said the government could also consider reintroducing shorter one-year education diplomas.

Labor campaign spokesman Jason Clare
Jason Clare says ministers will consider paid internships, shorter courses and pay incentives for teachers.(ABC)

The NSW government has already backed the Commonwealth government to consider university incentives to attract and improve retention of students studying education.

It is arguing against a national push on teacher pay, saying that it should be left to the states — and it’s considering an overhaul on pay agreements, proposing to offer $73,737 for new graduates and a salary up to $117,060 for teachers who gain accreditation as a highly accomplished or lead teacher.

NSW has also proposed employing dedicated workers to help ease administrative burdens for teachers, something Mr Clare supported.

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Business

In New Zealand wages are growing. Will Australian workers’ pay packets get a bump?

The cost of living is soaring. Rocketing food prices and rising interest rates mean that without a substantial rise in wages, workers find themselves going backwards.

So are wage rises coming?

Ahead of official data out next week there are conflicting signals about what’s going on with wages.

going up

The good news, if you’re a worker, is that it’s a great time to be you.

Job vacancies are at a record high and there’s a massive shortage of labor (partly because so many migrants have gone home since the pandemic began and haven’t returned).

For advanced manufacturing company ANCA, that means paying people more.

Johanna Boland 1
Advanced manufacturing firm ANCA has been lifting wages to reward staff and lure new talent as they expand, says Johanna Boland the company’s strategy and communications manager.(ABC News: Simon Tucci)

“If we don’t have the right people, then we’re not going to be able to succeed in the marketplace. So we’ve got to pay what the market’s asking,” says the company’s strategy and community manager Johanna Boland.

“I think it’s not just inflation, it’s also been a really hot market for talent.”

ANCA is competing with tech companies, banks and start-ups for software engineers and designers with in-demand skills. It employs 1,300 people globally, most in Bayswater in Melbourne’s outer suburbs.

The staff work in a variety of divisions, making things like complex robotic tools and components. Its machines are used by other companies in high-precision work, for example in cutting components used in mobile phones and medical equipment.

Early this year some staff started asking for more money to deal with rising living costs. The company did a “wide-scale analysis” looking at its entire staff and lifted wages for all.

The budget for wages has already changed since May and at the review in October it will be more again.

ANCA staff will get more money. Will you?

Kiwi wages lift

Australia’s unemployment rate is at its lowest level since 1974, at just 3.5 per cent. In New Zealand it’s down to 3.3 per cent – ​​and it was even lower in the previous quarter.

(Even though it’s a blunt measure, with someone working an hour a fortnight considered “employed”, it is the measure generally used globally.)

That should mean higher demand for workers, leading to a boost in wages. In Australia that hasn’t happened yet, but New Zealand figures out this week show big lifts in how many workers are taking home in pay.

We have similar economies – and in New Zealand average hourly earnings are up to 7 per cent, year on year, for workers in the private sector, those not employed by governments. That’s almost catching up to the consumer price index (inflation) growing at 7.4 per cent.

Auckland city at sunrise
Auckland is beautiful. And wages there are rising.(Reuters: Stefan Wermuth)

Also, 26 per cent of jobs surveyed received a pay rise of more than 5 per cent, the highest proportion since 2008. And about two-thirds of jobs received an increase in ordinary-time wage rates in the past year –the highest level on record.

breaking history

Australians aren’t getting that kind of a boost. They’re going backwards.

The Reserve Bank of Australia see wages rising about 3.5 per cent next year, but that’s a significant pay cut in real terms. That’s because inflation is expected to peak at 7.75 per cent by the end of this year, be about 6.2 per cent by the middle of 2023 and 4.3 per cent by the end of next year.

So prices will keep rising faster than pay packets, meaning a cut in ‘real wages’ for millions of people.

There’s a simple answer on wages, according to Joseph Stiglitz, recipient of the Nobel Prize for Economics:

“They need to be higher.”

Joseph Stiglitz
Former World Bank chief economist Joseph Stiglitz wants to see people get higher wages.(International Monetary Fund/flickr.com/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

“The only thing Australians might feel good about is that they’re better than what’s happening in the United States, where things are devastating,” he said during a visit to talk to parliamentarians, trade unionists and business leaders.

Asset prices like houses and stocks have soared during the pandemic. A decade of low wage growth means people who get their income from wages are falling behind.

“The price of inequality is that low-paid workers are less productive. If we as a society reduce inequality, we’ll have a better performing economy. Better paid workers are less anxious… more satisfied, less likely to quit.”

Cost pressure

For many businesses, it’s not easy to raise wages.

Peter Burn, director of public policy at the Australian Industry Group (Ai Group), notes salaries are a big cost. But they’re just one, and many of the other major elements that go into running a business have already asked for more.

“Cost pressures are widespread,” he said.

Peter Burn
Dr Peter Burn of the Ai Group doesn’t see broad, large wage rises coming.(ABC News—Dan Irvine)

“There’s cost pressures coming from energy costs — electricity and gas, petrol — freight has been a major cost increase for a lot of businesses. The prices of building materials have risen very sharply, digital equipment [too]. They’re the big ones we’ve been hearing about.”

Dr Burn says these costs are particularly strong, but they also flip what’s become normal.

“We’ve become used to low or even falling prices in recent years. So this is a sudden reversal of what we’ve become used to,” he said.

He sees “big gaps” in the wages picture. There are aggregates (for everyone) of around 2.5 per cent growth, but certain industries and roles are seeing sharp wage rises.

“But what we’re hearing from particular businesses is they’re increasing the wages, they’ve got to pay (bigger) salaries attract particular staff,” he says, pointing to tech and project management as key fields enjoying substantial leaps in salary .

That’s putting wage pressure on businesses those business, he adds.

“But as a general rule across the economy, wage pressures are not high.”

Job seeking

Australia’s largest job site is a gold mine of information about what’s happening with wages. Or it could be.

“So most employers don’t put the salary on the job ad,” advises Kendra Banks, managing director of Seek. “This is something we do advise employers to think about more carefully. If the salary is good, if they think it’s above average, it will certainly attract more applicants.”

Why don’t they – especially in a tight labor market where people are looking to make more money to meet the cost of living? Because they cause chaos in their workplaces.

“It’s quite often in some organizations that newcomers will have different salary levels than the existing employees. So advertising that through the ad could create challenges internally for some companies or organisations,” she says.

Kendra Banks
Kendra Banks says some advertised jobs have large salary increases. (ABC News: Simon Tucci)

This is like the so-called ‘loyalty premium’ paid by consumers. Long-term bank customers with a home loan, for example, are sometimes shocked to learn that people walking into the branch and taking out a mortgage are offered a better rate.

In jobs, too, there’s a benefit to switching.

“We see that through some of the ABS data that looks at wage changes for people who’ve moved employers and those who haven’t,” Ms Banks says.

“And the wage change for those who’ve moved employers is significantly higher than those who haven’t.”

With other costs rocketing, employers may be offering inducements that aren’t money.

“Participation in the labor market in Australia is already very, very high, so it may be that wage growth is not exactly what it takes (to lure workers),” she adds.

Perks like flexible working, the ability to work from home, to set your own hours and leave stronger entitlements may be areas “employers are leaning on more in order to attract the best candidates.”

Cost pressure

Switching employers might bring more money, but for many workers it’s not possible or desirable. They have to either push their boss for a bigger pay packet, or wait for external pressure to do it.

And that might not eat.

“For 10 years, we’ve been told that some Magic Wage Growth Fairy will come along and one day boost wages,” says an exasperated Richard Denniss, chief economist of the Australian Institute.

“The reason we have low wage growth is because employers are not offering decent wage rises.

“The only way that wages can grow in Australia is if employers pay their workers higher wages. And every employer, including the public sector is saying, ‘Oh, we can’t afford to offer high wage growth’.

“So unless lots of employers are offering wages that start with a 5 (per cent), then we’re not going to see average wage growth start with a 3.”

A man in a blue shirt stands in front of an apartment building.
Richard Denniss, chief economist and former executive director of the Australia Institute.(ABC News: Ian Cutmore)

Data out on August 17 from the Australian Bureau of Statistics will let us know what’s happened to wages in the recent past. What happens in the future is up to workers, unions, bosses, governments and companies.

“The way a market is supposed to work is when something is scarce, the price goes up,” Dr Denniss says.

“That’s what’s happened with gas. But when it happens with labour, apparently there’s a problem.”

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Categories
Australia

Financial incentives for regional teachers pitched to help fill SA skill shortage

A principal says better pay and a free ride to the bush would encourage teachers to follow their profession in regional South Australian schools.

Federal Education Minister Jason Clare yesterday called on his state and territory counterparts to meet to create a national strategy to stop educators leaving the field and to attract more people to the profession.

He said the shortage wasn’t about flu and COVID-19 infections keeping teachers out of the classroom, but a drop in people entering the profession and an increase in educators leaving.

Rivergum Christian College principal Jessica Richards said it was a familiar trend in regional education.

A young student raises his hand in a classroom setting.
Jason Clare has called on states and territories to address Australia’s teaching shortage. (ABC Riverland: Catherine Heuzenroeder)

“Something like 50 per cent of teachers quit in their first five years of teaching,” Ms Richards said.

She said teachers were an aging population because younger teachers were not coming in to meet demand.

“The pressure on teachers means they aren’t sticking it out for the long haul because there’s just so much that’s demanded of teachers these days,” Mr Richards said.

“Why would you stay in education when there’s other options available to you, even though education is such a vital part of our society?”

Regional stint should be ‘encouraged’

SA Department of Education chief executive Martin Westwell said the department was looking at incentive options for regional teachers.

A woman stands in front of a classroom of children
Extra pay could encourage teachers to move to regional areas.(AAP: Dan Peled)

He said the department was looking at ways to create placements for education students to experience living in the country.

“We want the right people moving to country areas that are going to make the most out of living there and be quality teachers for our students,” Mr Westwell said.

Catholic Education South Australia Port Pirie Diocese education director Nicchi Mardon said the education sector needed to “strongly encourage” teachers to work in regional areas.

A woman with blonde hair and black glasses smiling for a portrait photo.
Nichii Mardon wants steps taken to strongly encourage teachers to regional areas. (Supplied: Catholic Education SA)

“We know that when people come into our communities they not only come into a school, but a town and regional community and find it so rewarding,” she said.

“There can be incentives as a part of that, but the heart of it that attracts people to come and for them to stay, is actually to experience an amazing community.”

Investing in the next generation

Ms Richards said covering moving costs and better pay for regional teachers were the first incentives that needed to be considered.

A woman in a white jumper wearing glasses smiling at a camera.
Ms Richards hopes more people can realize teaching is a rewarding profession. (ABC Riverland: Sam Bradbrook)

She said while regional education came with its own set of challenges, it was a rewarding job which offered unique experiences.

“There’s nothing quite like seeing an ‘a-ha’ moment where something clicks for a student where they go to a whole other level of their understanding of a task,” Ms Richards said.

“I’m a huge believer in the next generation and we really need to invest in these young people and what better way to do that through education.”

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Categories
Australia

Nurses strike in Launceston as government offers last-minute proposal

A last-minute proposal from the state government to improve working conditions for Tasmania’s nurses has failed to stop a strike from going ahead at the Launceston General Hospital.

Nurses have been quitting in droves as they grapple with the pressures of the pandemic, rising workloads, long hours and tight resources.

But the Tasmanian government hopes a $2,000 “return to work” bonus will persuade those who recently resigned to give the job a second chance.

It is one of a suite of incentives the government has put on the table to stop nurses and midwives from striking and to prevent Tasmania’s troubled healthcare system from buckling.

Following a short but serious strike at the Royal Hobart Hospital last week, unionized workers at the Launceston General Hospital walked off the job for 15 minutes on Wednesday.

Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation state secretary Emily Shepherd said the government’s latest offer had some “real positives” but came too late to delay the industrial action.

“Of course, we’ll take our members’ feedback on this and go back to the Premier but there certainly isn’t a quick fix to this,” she said.

“We all need to work together and it’s pleasing the government have come with a suggestion around a collaborative way forward.”

‘We have clearly been listening’

The union received the government’s latest offer on Tuesday night, which included the “return-to-work” bonus, a plan to put clinical coaches in all wards with a high proportion (30 per cent) of novice practitioners and improved anti-viral access .

The government is also promising to increase private hospital support for public hospitals, review workplace vacancies and trial a state-wide “transition to practice model”, with an immediate appointment to permanency alongside a six-month probation period.

As with many industrial disputes, pay is a key concern, however, the government has so far only promised to commence negotiations to address the wages of nurses and midwives.

A group of nurses hold signs in protest in Launceston.
Nurses have been quitting in droves as they grapple with a variety of pressures.(ABC News: Damian McIntyre)

Premier Jeremy Rockliff said he has recognized the demands being placed on health staff.

“We have clearly been listening and today we are acting,” he said.

The government said there were also other measures in place to help health staff, such as a COVID-19 allowance.

A daily allowance of up to $60 a day for a frontline nurse would be paid on top of salary at a hospital that has spent at least 30 consecutive days at COVID escalation level 3 and remained there.

It would work out to an average of an extra $300 a week for full-time staff.

A line of nurses protested in Launceston.
The government’s offer came too late to delay the industrial action, nurses said.(ABC News: Damian McIntyre)

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