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Reserve Bank has job on hands
February 15, 2012
www.farahnewsonline.com/
AUSTRALIA'S recently
unemployed should take a class action against the Reserve Bank because it has
failed to deliver on one of its core missions, one of the nation's top
economists said yesterday.
Professor William Mitchell, a leading
voice on the jobless from the University of Newcastle, has said the proof was
plain to see that the Reserve Bank wasn't living up to its duty of "maintaining
full employment in Australia".
"I definitely believe the unemployed
should take a class action against the central bank," Prof Mitchell said.
"They've certainly failed in this
part of their requirements, because they claim to have managed the current
unemployment rate yet it's clearly on the rise."
After ANZ announced on Monday it would axe 1000 jobs, speculation is mounting
that Qantas will be the next company to announce mass job losses. The airline is
due to unveil its half-yearly financial results tomorrow, when it is feared
engineering job cuts may also be announced.
Australian Licensed Aircraft Engineers
Association federal secretary Steve Purvinas said the rumours were building that
the airline was planning to slash jobs.
"It wouldn't surprise me that Qantas
would shed hundreds of jobs which seems to be their style of management rather
than harnessing the quality product that we produce here in Australia," Mr
Purvinas said.
Qantas denied the claim, saying in a statement that "any suggestion that Qantas
is sending jobs offshore is totally incorrect".
While last month's overall unemployment remained steady at a respectable 5.2 per
cent for December, analysts suggest the official figure could have been much
more dire.
"If the participation rate remained
at 65.5 per cent, then the unemployment rate would have risen to 5.6 per cent,"
TD Securities head of Asian-Pacific research Annette Beacher said. However the
participation rate sank to 65.2 per cent, its lowest level in almost two years.
Former Reserve Bank board member, Warwick McKibbon, yesterday said the bank
would now be finding it difficult to balance keeping inflation in check with
managing unemployment levels.
"We know from the '80s that if you
let inflation get out of control and then stomp on it like they did in '89 and
'91, the unemployment will spike dramatically. That's the trade-off right now,
between inflation and unemployment," Mr McKibbon said.
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