NewsBite

Opinion

These workers should get JobKeeper for longer

The end date for JobKeeper is still too soon for many Aussie workers. Anthony Keane argues why these workers deserve it above others.

Changes to JobKeeper and JobSeeker payments

Shrinking and disappearing JobKeeper payments are piling extra stress on many workers and business owners, but a simple act by the Federal Government could ease it.

During COVID’s economic carnage, Australia’s JobKeeper wage subsidies have propped up about a million businesses and provided a financial lifeline for 3.5 million workers.

But it’s coming to an end. The maximum payment was scaled back last month from $1500 to $1200 a fortnight, from January 4 it drops to $1000 a fortnight, and on March 28 it’s bye bye JobKeeper.

It’s understandable that the government needs to wean people off these payments, and to kill off the so-called zombie companies that were struggling before the pandemic but have sailed through it on government handouts.

Travel group Flight Centre has slashed its global workforce from 22,000 to 7000 during the pandemic. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Andrew Henshaw
Travel group Flight Centre has slashed its global workforce from 22,000 to 7000 during the pandemic. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Andrew Henshaw

However, some workers and businesses have little or no chance of returning to normal operations before March 2021.

Think aviation, travel agents, tourism operators and transport services that rely heavily on the overseas travellers who are still banned from visiting Australia. It’s likely these bans won’t ease significantly until later in 2021.

Many restaurants and cafes remain unviable because social distancing rules mean the only way they can operate is by running at a loss.

These business owners and workers can’t be blamed for their predicament. It’s the federal and state governments that have set the rules (some more draconian than others) and that bloody virus that created the need for those rules.

Why, then, should business owners and workers be thrown onto the scrap heap because of temporary rules being forced on them?

Tourism and hospitality businesses will eventually play a huge role in rebuilding Australia’s economy when international travel and hospitality services return to normal.

Overseas visitors should flock here after seeing how well we’ve handled the pandemic. But if we don’t have the businesses to service those visitors, they will stay away and deprive our nation of a welcome cash injection.

International tourists will hopefully be back by late 2021. Picture: Katherine Visitor Information Centre
International tourists will hopefully be back by late 2021. Picture: Katherine Visitor Information Centre

The Federal Government is spending an estimated $86 billion on JobKeeper, and hundreds of billions in total on its COVID-19 economic response.

Surely a few billion more bucks aimed at helping the hardest-hit sectors and businesses won’t blow up the Budget much more than has been hit already.

Record-low interest rates here and globally mean that the cost of repaying our fast-growing national debt is a smaller proportion of the economy (GDP) than it was in the 1990s.

The Federal Government has done a great job shielding Australians from the worst financial impacts of COVID-19, and I do believe it will help still-affected industries beyond March 2021

There’s no political mileage to be gained by announcing targeted extensions of JobKeeper five months before the March deadline. But it would make a massive emotional difference to those who worry what 2021 will mean for their sector, their career and their life.

A simple message from the Federal Government that says “we’ve got your back” until this pandemic is over is all that’s needed. Hopefully it comes well before March next year.

@keanemoney

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/moneysaverhq/these-workers-should-get-jobkeeper-for-longer/news-story/a45fa84475dbd4c877a8dd39ea7bac27