Andrei.Hicks wrote on May 17
th, 2012 at 2:23pm:
Doctor Jolly wrote on May 17
th, 2012 at 2:17pm:
None of the liberals or those funding the liberals (BHP,etc) have actually said what they want changed ?
Be specific, or are they scared to mention work-choices ?
Workchoices had so much mud slung at it by the Unions in a deliberate smear campaign (read To the Bitter End) and it worked.
The actual concept of Workchoices is a good one.
To remove the third party influence, get Australians working to a more modern set of rules and regulations - give employers flexibility to respond to changed global market conditions etc.
I have worked my whole life on individual contracts with billion dollar multi-nationals.
Workchoices was about moving away from the rigid, stuck in the past 1970s style agreements and onto a more modern set of employment agreements as the norm.
It was a good thing.
But the Unions saw it as a threat to their power and chucked the kitchen sink at besmirching its name,
What the Howard Government's Industrial Relations Policy Did To Wealth Inequality In Australia:
Gap between rich and poor widens
August 3, 2007

Figures published yesterday showed the biggest increase in inequality was between 2003-04 and 2005-06, with a surge in income generated by the top 20 per cent of households.
In that time, low-income households gained a $24-a-week increase in average household income. The increase extended to $43 a week for middle-income households and $139 a week for high-income households.
This was an 8 per cent increase in income for low- and middle-income households, but for the wealthiest households the increase was 13 per cent, the Bureau of Statistics figures showed...
...In 2005-06 the top 20 per cent of households held 61 per cent of total household wealth, with an average net worth of $1.7 million per household. The poorest 20 per cent of households had an average net worth of $27,000, or 1 per cent of total household wealth.
The Prime Minister, John Howard, said last week that not everybody was sharing in the good economic times...
http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/gap-widens/2007/08/02/1185648060461.html