shortages – Michmutters
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Australia

Second jobs, burnout and too much work: Teachers demoralized as education ministers meet for crisis talks on staff shortages

Five days a week, Karl* goes to work as a high school teacher, planning lessons, marking tests, and dealing with admin. Then, on Sundays, he puts on his uniform and works a sixth day at a local shop.

It’s a long week even though, technically, he’s a part-time teacher.

Despite only being contracted to work two full days at the school — and three half-days — the amount of unpaid overtime needed to prepare for the next day’s classes quickly fills the spare time.

Which is exactly why Karl chose not to take on full-time teaching when he recently graduated, despite a widespread shortage of Australian teachers.

“I kept hearing horror stories of the first-year — early teachers they burn out, they struggle, and I was concerned about it,” he says. “I haven’t sat through a degree so I can do a job for a couple of years and then burnout. I want to do this for a long time, so I need to pace myself.”

Horror stories, like those that led Karl to choose his phased entry into the profession, have become all too common in the teaching industry.

Correna Haythorpe, the national president of the Australian Education Union (AEU) which represents public school teachers across the country, believes the attrition rate for teachers could be as high as 30 per cent within the first five years in some parts of the country.

The cause is often chalked up to “burnout”, a far-reaching condition that can be driven by ballooning workloads, the expansion of responsibility and periods of high stress, like the COVID pandemic.

“The big word that I would use to describe what’s happening to teachers is demoralisation,” says Gabbie Stroud, a former teacher (or “recovering teacher”, as she describes it) and author of a book about her own burnout.

Gabby Stroud
Former teacher Gabbie Stroud recently answered the call to return to casual teaching due to staff shortages. (Supplied: Gabbie Stroud)

“But how that’s happening is broad and varied: it’s increasing workload, it’s data collection, administration and standardization, and all of those activities that take teachers away from the core business of teaching.”

These issues and more will form part of a roundtable discussion between national, state and territory education ministers on Friday, as they look for ways to attract new teachers to the profession, retain existing staff and stem the chronic shortages plaguing schools.

It comes as Department of Education modeling revealed demand for high school teachers was set to outstrip graduates by more than 4,000 over the next three years.

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Categories
Business

Cooking oil shortages pushing up food prices and creating headaches for manufacturers

We’ve all heard about the skyrocketing price of oil at the pump, but did you know there’s another oil crisis?

At the helm of a deep fryer, Teresa Paolini is right across this issue.

A few years ago, her family-owned takeaway shop in Melbourne used to be able to buy her preferred cottonseed oil blend for less than $40 a drum.

“Now it’s up to $60,” Ms Paolini says.

The latest consumer price index (CPI) data just showed a 14 per cent rise in the price of cooking oil in the past year. The only other sector of food that’s gone up by more is fruit and vegetables.

Indirectly, analysts say, the cooking oil crunch is now likely to hit many other parts of the food chain.

That’s because it is such a fundamental staple ingredient. Edible oil is in everything from margarine through to hummus and baked goods, and there is only so much of a price hike that manufacturers through to takeaway shops can absorb.

“We’ve had to put our prices up about 50 cents on each item,” Ms Paolini says.

And it’s not just fried chips.

a woman with a vat of cooking oil
Teresa Paolini has bumped prices at her takeaway shop in Melbourne because cooking oil has gone up.(ABC News: Chris LePage)

In bad news for beauty, vegetable oils are a core ingredient in moisturizer and lipstick.

The latest CPI data shows personal care items already went up almost 5 per cent in a year. One company that develops and manufactures cosmetics is tipping that inflation will escalate by up to 15 per cent by 2023, due to vegetable oil prices.

As well as price hikes, the situation is also creating headaches for food labelling.

One of Australia’s biggest food manufacturers, Goodman Fielder, has just announced that it is having to replace some of the sunflower oil in its well-known mayonnaise Praise with canola oil.

That’s how far-reaching the issue has become.

What’s driving the cooking oil crunch?

Just like petroleum and gas, vegetable oil is a globally traded commodity that follows international pricing.

Most of this year’s headlines about the cooking oil crunch have centered around the war in Ukraine. Both it and Russia are some of the biggest producers of sunflower oil, and the war has seen their exports largely curtailed.

“[Edible oil] prices really escalated very quickly this year as a result of the invasion,” Rabobank’s senior commodities analyst Cheryl Kalisch Gordon told ABC News.

However, sunflower oil is not one of the most-consumed edible oils globally, and the price pressures go far beyond the war in Ukraine.

“Prior to that, we were already seeing prices that were double the five-year average,” Ms Kalisch Gordon said.

The three most-widely consumed oils globally are canola, palm and soybean.

Before the war, Ms Kalisch Gordon said, canola supply was already being hit by drought in key producers, including Canada.

a graph showing price spikes on canola oil

Meanwhile, soybeans saw extra demand from China, which bought up beans to rebuild their pig herds after an outbreak of swine fever.

“On top of that, we had a disappointing harvest of soybeans out of Brazil and more broadly across South America, including Paraguay,” Ms Kalisch Gordon said.

Then there were issues during the pandemic with worker shortages in Indonesia and Malaysia, which produces much of the world’s palm oil.

“They just weren’t able to get the harvest out of the plantations,” Ms Kalisch Gordon said.

The other oil crisis, petroleum, didn’t help.

Ms Kalisch Gordon said fossil fuels were now so expensive, that markets were turning to edible oils to make biodiesel instead.

“We’ve had production increasing at a slower rate than consumption increase. We’ve got a strong biodiesel market that is growing internationally,” she said.

As this all happened, some countries — including Turkey, Indonesia and Argentina — put export bans on their edible oils to ensure their own populations had enough of these vital ingredients.

“Really, we have found ourselves with a litany of issues feeding into this that wouldn’t be expected normally,” Ms Kalisch Gordon said.

“The higher prices for soybean, palm oil and canola have led to higher prices or costs across the entire complex, including for olive oil and cottonseed.”

a man in front of a truck
Peter Fitzgerald has never seen price hikes on edible oil like those he is currently dealing with at Cookers.(ABC News: Chris LePage)

Cookers is one of Australia’s biggest vegetable oil distributors.

The national company buys canola and olive oil from refineries across Australia and overseas, including recently from Ukraine until the invasion. It is subject to whatever prices its suppliers pass on.

“We’ve seen prices in the last two years virtually double,” the company’s managing director Peter Fitzgerald said.

“It’s something we’ve never seen in our industry.

“And we don’t know where that’s going to end up”

Cookers is pushing these price hikes onto its customers, which include takeaway chains and major food manufacturers that use vegetable oil in everything from hummus to margarine.

“They’re all addressing this with the supermarkets currently,” Mr Fitzgerald said.

“If you look at a lot of packaging, oil is such a large component in so many foods.

“I think that you’ll see that as this flushes through, that it’s going to continue price increases at the customer level.”

As well as food staples, vegetable oil is also a core ingredient in many of life’s little luxuries, including makeup.

Woman applying lipstick.
The price of cosmetics is also set to rise due to the vegetable oil crisis.(Getty Images: Andreas Rentz)

Rohan Widdison runs local cosmetics developer and manufacturer New Laboratories.

He’s forecasting price hikes on everything from moisturizer to lipstick, largely in part due to the extreme increases he is seeing on oils such as almond.

“We’ve held off passing pricing on to a lot of clients. But now what we’re seeing is elements where it’s just impossible to hold off,” Mr Widdison said.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if you don’t see increases [at the consumer level] that are going to range from 8 to 15 per cent in the coming year.”

Mr Widdison isn’t so sure the global price rises all come down to supply and demand, either.

“At a certain point in time, then the question really becomes: Is it the market price? Or is it really just profit-taking?” I have asked.

He said the issue was bigger than just a moisturizer.

“There’s no question that we should be looking at food security before cosmetics,” he said.

“If you use palm oil, for example, I’m fully supportive of the Indonesian government protecting that essential commodity for domestic use.”

The impact of oil prices in poorer nations is something the World Food Program and the World Bank are concerned about too.

In good news, the price spikes on soybean and palm oil do appear to have gone past their peak.

a graph showing price spikes on edible oils

Ms Kalisch Gordon said that improvement had come as growing conditions improve in the regions hit by drought.

Most of the markets such as Indonesia — that put temporary export bans on their oils — have now lifted them.

And global markets also appear to be pricing in decreases after the resumption of Black Sea exports.

However, the situation remains volatile.

For instance, just this month, there has been fresh talk of olive oil shortages after another drought in Spain.

“We don’t expect prices to drop or reduce in their volatility substantially in the near term,” Ms Kalisch Gordon said.

“So this isn’t going to play out quickly.”

“I don’t see [prices] returning to the five year-averages of pricing across this complex that we saw prior to COVID.”

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