- Labor backing minimum wage increase
Anthony Albanese is backing a generous pay increase for Australia’s lowest-paid workers.
The federal government has made a submission to the Fair Work Commission recommending a real wage increase for the three million Australians either on the minimum wage or an award, from July 1.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers and new Employment and Workplace Relations Minister Amanda Rishworth said this was about helping Australia’s lowest-paid workers.
‘This will help around three million workers across the country, including cleaners, retail workers and early childhood educators,’ they said.
‘Boosting wages, cutting taxes for every taxpayer and creating more jobs are central parts of our efforts to help Australians with the cost of living.’
The annual wage review decision, due to be announced in June, would affect 180,000 Australians on the minimum wage plus the 2.7million on 121 awards.
Australia’s lowest paid last year received a 3.75 per cent increase that saw the minimum wage rise to $24.10 an hour or $915.90 a week.
The industrial umpire’s decision was made in June last year when headline inflation was at 3.6 per cent, which meant only a small real wage increase of 0.15 per cent.
But in the year to March, wages rose by 3.4 per cent when the consumer price index was at 2.4 per cent – meaning a real wage increase for most workers of one per cent.
Unemployment in April remained at a low 4.1 per cent – or at a level below the non-accelerating inflationary rate of unemployment where wage rises can still fuel inflation because workers still have the power to bargain for better pay.

Anthony Albanese is backing a generous pay increase for Australia’s lowest-paid workers