Dr. Jim Stanford, Director of the Centre for Future Work, reviewed the ACTU’s paper in detail, and prepared an evaluation of its proposals and likely effects. Stanford endorsed the policy’s complementary set of expansionary macroeconomic measures, which would strengthen every major component of aggregate demand in the national economy: including government programs, capital investment, net exports, and consumer spending. He also emphasised the importance of the paper’s vision for a stronger labour market information and planning system, which will be essential to effectively match workers with jobs as the labour market tightens.
Stanford estimated that the ACTU’s plan, if implemented consistently over a five-year period, would be capable of achieving the following outcomes:
- Unemployment rate falling to 4 percent or lower.
- Share of full-time work rebounding toward 75 percent of employment (since employers will be pressured by falling unemployment to create full-time jobs).
- Underemployment rate falling to fall to 5 percent or lower.
- Incidence of casual work declining below 20 percent.
- Labour force participation rising by at least 2 percentage points, especially among young workers.
- Nominal wage growth accelerating to traditional rates of 4 percent per year.
Read the complete ACTU paper, Jobs You Can Count On.
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