Parliamentary Salaries and Superannuation Amendment (Salary restraint) Bill 2012 – Second Reading Speech delivered in Parliament 23 May 2012
Mr PALLAS (Tarneit) — I rise to speak on the Parliamentary Salaries and Superannuation Amendment (Salary Restraint) Bill 2012. My contribution to this bill will be brief. The state opposition does not oppose the bill. However, in indicating that position let me be clear that it does not come out of a sense of acceptance that this bill reflects, as is stated in the second-reading speech, the government’s commitment to responsible fiscal management.
Rather, this bill is about politicians awarding pay increases to politicians, and in those circumstances, recognising that harsh reality, in the absence of any alternative measure or mechanism or for that matter justification, members of Parliament should not afford to themselves wage increases higher than the wage outcomes being imposed on the Victorian public sector.
Those outcomes are the result of a mandated and, might I say, inflexible state government wages policy. We could argue about whether 2.5 per cent reflects the expectation of the community — I do not believe for one moment that it does — or indeed the outcome of wage bargains struck to date, but quite frankly we on this side of the house would prefer to spend this Parliament’s time debating matters of more pressing concern to the Victorian public.
The opposition supports the proposition stated in the second-reading speech:
- The Victorian government does not believe that the increase given to federal parliamentarians should flow on to Victorian parliamentary salaries in the current economic circumstances.
- The government believes that the proper course would be for members of the Victorian Parliament to receive an increase in line with the public sector wages policy, and for a new mechanism to be established for future adjustments.
Let us hope this is the last time this Parliament has to indulge itself in talking about the isolated level of wage increases politicians intend awarding to themselves. Using legislation to set wages on a regular basis not only consumes the time of this Parliament but is also ultimately an act of self-absorption and introspection, when the community expects members of this place to direct their energies and efforts beyond our own fundamental concerns.
I acknowledge that this is not the first time and neither is this government the first government to propose to deal with politicians’ pay in this manner. Nevertheless it is an unsustainable mechanism that should not reside within our control. No other section of the community indulges itself with mechanisms managed by itself to remunerate itself. The opposition supports the concept of an independent review to provide the government with options for transparent and accountable governance arrangements.
The wages of members of this place are in an uncertain situation following the findings of the initial report of the Remuneration Tribunal concerning members of Parliament dated December 2011, which stated that any federal linkage should be severed. Consequently, and in the absence of any alternative independent mechanism or arrangement, salary adjustments of 2.5 per cent would seem the only reasonable and appropriate course available to this place.
On that basis the opposition does not oppose this bill and hopes never to have to see the Parliament’s time devoted to one-off, ad hoc wage adjustment legislation in the future.