Grasping the Moment: Some Cross-Tasman Thoughts on Australian Labour Law Reform. Grasping the Moment: Some Cross-Tasman Thoughts on Australian Labour Law Reform.

Grasping the Moment: Some Cross-Tasman Thoughts on Australian Labour Law Reform‪.‬

Economic and Labour Relations Review 2008, May, 18, 2

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Beschreibung des Verlags

It is something of a poisoned chalice to be asked to comment on another country's labour law reforms. Even proffering such advice at home can lead to suggestions that one's opinion is lacking in credibility; a former Minister of Labour asserting that my 'assertions stray into the domain of the wild and erratic'. (1) Commenting on a system that has many similarities to one's own, and which until the last quarter of the twentieth century had largely the same legal structure, seems a straightforward task, but carries the risk that nuances may not be fully understood or be overlooked. Close similarities may mask quite different political and economic dynamics that may be misunderstood. The devil, as always, is in the detail. I began writing this comment on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the signing of the Australia-New Zealand Closer Economic Relations Free Trade Agreement (CER). Given the very high degree of trans-Tasman economic integration and the existence of an open trans-Tasman labour market, it is worth making the point that one area of law that has remained outside the CER harmonisation project has been labour law. The only exception has been reinforcing free movement of labour. (2) Implementing CER has required a high degree of legal and regulatory harmonisation, in turn dependent on a high level of policy congruence and mutual confidence in the other's regulatory and administrative systems. In this respect CER differs significantly from the European Union, where harmonisation of labour standards has been an important part of the integration program. The reasons for excluding labour regulation from CER are essentially pragmatic. There is no need to include it and every reason not to. Each country can have confidence that at the macro-level neither is disadvantaged by the mode of regulation in the other.

GENRE
Business und Finanzen
ERSCHIENEN
2008
1. Mai
SPRACHE
EN
Englisch
UMFANG
17
Seiten
VERLAG
Centre for Applied Economic Research and Industrial Relations Research Centre
GRÖSSE
273
 kB

Mehr ähnliche Bücher

Labour Standards, Safety Nets and Minimum Conditions. Labour Standards, Safety Nets and Minimum Conditions.
2008
A Simple Plan for Reform? the Problem of Complexity in Workplace Regulation *. A Simple Plan for Reform? the Problem of Complexity in Workplace Regulation *.
2005
Future Prospects for Labour Law--Lessons from the United Kingdom. Future Prospects for Labour Law--Lessons from the United Kingdom.
2008
How the Judiciary * Continues to Undermine Labour Market Dereulation ** (OPINION) How the Judiciary * Continues to Undermine Labour Market Dereulation ** (OPINION)
2005
Workchoices and Independent Contractors: The Revolution That Never Happened. Workchoices and Independent Contractors: The Revolution That Never Happened.
2008
Worker Representation in Australia: Moving Towards Overseas Models?(Contributed Article) (Report) Worker Representation in Australia: Moving Towards Overseas Models?(Contributed Article) (Report)
2007

Mehr Bücher von Economic and Labour Relations Review

The Rise and, Hopefully, The Fall of Economic Neo-Liberalism in Theory and Practice (Column) The Rise and, Hopefully, The Fall of Economic Neo-Liberalism in Theory and Practice (Column)
2009
Responses by Teachers and Their Unions to Changing Work ("Industrial Relations in Education: Transforming the School Workforce", "the Global Assault on Teaching, Teachers, And Their Unions: Stories of Resistance" and "Teachers and Their Times: History and the Teachers Federation") (Book Review) Responses by Teachers and Their Unions to Changing Work ("Industrial Relations in Education: Transforming the School Workforce", "the Global Assault on Teaching, Teachers, And Their Unions: Stories of Resistance" and "Teachers and Their Times: History and the Teachers Federation") (Book Review)
2011
Looking Back to Move Forward: The (D)Evolution of Australia's EEO Regulatory Framework (Symposium) (Equal Opportunity for Women in the Workplace Act 1999) Looking Back to Move Forward: The (D)Evolution of Australia's EEO Regulatory Framework (Symposium) (Equal Opportunity for Women in the Workplace Act 1999)
2009
Modern Awards and Skill Development Through Apprenticeships and Traineeships (Report) Modern Awards and Skill Development Through Apprenticeships and Traineeships (Report)
2010
Brendan Sheehan (2010): the Economics of Abundance: Affluent Consumption and the Global Economy. Brendan Sheehan (2010): the Economics of Abundance: Affluent Consumption and the Global Economy.
2012
Valuing Pollution: Problems of Price in the Commodification of Nature. Valuing Pollution: Problems of Price in the Commodification of Nature.
2012