The Economist - USA (2019-07-20)

(Antfer) #1

34 Asia The EconomistJuly 20th 2019


A

ustralia haslong been at the leading
edge of minimum wages. The state of
Victoria was the second place in the world
to introduce a wage floor in 1896, beaten
only by New Zealand. A landmark legal
case in 1907 took a more expansive view of a
fair wage, ruling that it should be enough to
maintain a family with three children in
“frugal comfort”. Australia is still at it: it
now has the world’s most generous mini-
mum wage, reclaiming a distinction it last
held more than a decade ago.
The oecd, a club mainly of rich coun-
tries, compares minimum wages around
the world by adjusting for inflation and the
cost of living, and converting them into
American dollars. On that basis Australian
workers pulled in at least $12.14 an hour last
year, up by nearly 4% from 2017. That puts
them narrowly ahead of their peers in Lux-
embourg, ranked second, and a whopping
two-thirds better off than federal mini-
mum-wage earners in America (see chart).
Australians may be incredulous to learn
that they are doing relatively well. In recent
years one of their big gripes has been slug-
gish wage growth. The norm in Australia
used to be nominal annual wage increases
of about 3% to 4%. Even after the global fi-
nancial crisis of 2008, wage growth re-
mained strong, thanks in part to the natu-
ral-resources boom. But over the past five
years the resources sector has lost its fizz,
and wage growth has ebbed to about 2% a
year, lower than in America.
That makes the high minimum wage all
the more notable. The Fair Work Commis-
sion, an independent panel that sets the
minimum wage after considering submis-
sions from industry and the unions as well
as academic research, raised it by 3% this
year, after increases of 3.5% in 2018 and
3.3% in 2017. These rises have outpaced
both inflation and broader wage growth,
and have helped give low-end workers a
somewhat bigger share of national income.
It used to be an article of faith among
economists that higher minimum wages
would cause job losses, but data from Aus-
tralia add to evidence that counters that as-
sumption, at least as long as increases are
gradual. A study by the Reserve Bank of
Australia (rba), the central bank, exam-
ined minimum-wage increases between
1998 and 2008, and found no discernible ef-
fect on employment. Similarly, over the
past five years, Australia’s unemployment
rate has fallen steadily.

Thevalueoftheminimumwageisespe-
ciallyimportantinAustraliasincethepay
ofsomanyworkersislinkedtoit.Undera
national systemof industry-wide salary
awards,payinmanyjobs,fromcabincrew
tofuneraldirectors,isineffectindexedto
theminimumwage.Everytimethemini-
mumwagegoesup,sodoesthepayofnear-
lya quarterofAustralians,makingit a pow-
erfullevertoaffecttheeconomyasa whole.
Therbaseemspleasedwiththeboostto
wages.It wantshigherearningstoliftinfla-
tion,whichisbelowitstargetof2-3%.With
thehousingmarketinthedoldrums,the
economyisgrowingattheslowestpace
since2009,threateningAustralia’s28-year
growthstreak.Butlowpayrises,saysPhilip
Lowe,theheadoftherba, harmtheecon-
omymorethanlowhouseprices. 7

Australians benefit from the world’s
highest minimum wage

Wages in Australia

Sun, surf and


bonzer pay


Lotsofdoughdownbelow

Source:OECD *Purchasing-powerparity

Hourlynationalminimumwage
Selectedcountries,2018,$ atPPP*

0 2 4 6 8 10 12
Australia
France
Germany
Netherlands
NewZealand
Britain
Canada
SouthKorea
UnitedStates

As%ofmedianwage, 2017

55
62
48
47

54
46
53
34

60

P

ots of brusheslitter the desk of Zulki-
flee Anwar Haque, a Malaysian political
cartoonist better known as Zunar. Draw-
ings of which he is especially proud deco-
rate the blue walls of his studio in Kuala
Lumpur. Several satirise Malaysia’s dis-
graced former prime minister, Najib Razak,
who was booted from office more than a
year ago, along with his big-haired wife,
Rosmah Mansor. Such cartoons drew the
ire of Mr Najib’s government. Zunar was
charged with multiple offences under illib-
eral laws on publishing and sedition. The
surprise victory in last year’s elections of a
reformist coalition, Pakatan Harapan (ph),
brought his legal troubles to an end. But al-
though phhas stopped persecuting jour-

nalists, it has not, as it promised, done
away with the instruments of repression.
“All the laws that the government used
against me before still exist,” he grumbles.
Dismantling the oppressive systems
put in place by the United Malays National
Organisation (umno), the party that ruled
Malaysia for more than six decades, was
never going to be quick or easy. Under Mr
Najib and, to a lesser extent, his predeces-
sors, the press was cowed, the electoral sys-
tem was rigged, the judiciary and bureauc-
racy were pliant and critics, whether
within or outside the government, were
harassed or imprisoned, often on
trumped-up charges. Officials who com-
plained about corruption at 1mdb, a state
investment vehicle from which $4.5bn dis-
appeared on Mr Najib’s watch, lost their
jobs. Those charged with investigating the
affair say they feared for their lives.
ph, many of whose members were vic-
tims of such abuses, promised to change all
this. Its manifesto was a liberal wish-list of
464 initiatives, including repealing the Se-
dition Act, allowing the press greater free-
dom, reducing the powers of the prime
minister and erecting stronger barriers be-
tween the executive and the judiciary. 
phhas taken some steps in the right di-
rection, most notably by appointing re-
spected figures to pivotal posts such as that
of attorney-general, speaker of parliament
and chief justice. A former campaigner for
fair elections now sits on the Election
Commission. The new head of the Malay-
sian Anti-Corruption Commission, Lath-
eefa Koya, is considered independent. And
in recent days the lower house of parlia-
ment passed an amendment to lower the
voting age from 21 to 18. The shift could en-
franchise almost 8m young voters in time
for the next general election, which is ex-
pected in 2023.
But in other respects, the government’s
record is chequered. An effort to repeal a
law on “fake news”, which allows the gov-
ernment to criminalise unfriendly report-
ing, was stymied in the upper house last
year by the opposition. There has been no
effort at all to repeal or amend a law that al-
lows for detention without trial for 28 days,
which was used to arrest the leader of de-
monstrations against corruption when Mr
Najib was prime minister. And revisions to
other laws, such as the Peaceful Assembly
Act of 2012, which in practice curtails prot-
ests, are seen as inadequate. For example,
the government plans to amend the law to
require protesters to give the authorities
seven days’ notice of a rally or march, rath-
er than the previous ten. That is still far
more, however, than the 48 hours that Hu-
man Rights Watch, an international ngo,
considers reasonable.
Meanwhile, Malaysians continue tobe
targeted under the Sedition Act. An outcry
followed the High Court’s decision this

KUALA LUMPUR
A callow government struggles to keep
its most laudable promises

Civil liberties in Malaysia

Spare change


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