Public Accounts and Estimates Committee: budget estimates 2012-13 (part 1)
Mr Pallas (Tarneit) — In regard to the Treasurer’s portfolio I refer to part 1 of report on the 2012-13 budget estimates. On page 127 of the report, paragraph 14.6.3 outlines key matters that were raised at the budget estimates hearing, including those regarding employment. It indicates that discussion of jobs growth can be found at pages 15 and 16 of the hearing transcript and discussion of public sector job losses can be found on pages 22 to 24 of the hearing transcript. The budget update says that employment growth in 2011-12 was up 0.8 per cent up from the projected 0.0 per cent. Australian Bureau of Statistics figures show that growth from June 2011 to June 2012 was 0.3 per cent.
In Public Accounts and Estimates Committee (PAEC) hearings the Treasurer was unable to answer whether Victoria would reach the projected 0.0 per cent growth.
We have heard from the Treasurer, both in PAEC hearings and yesterday in this Parliament, the government’s consistent mantra that we must live within our means. But of course governments must do much more than that; they must assist struggling Victorian families to deal with the challenges of an economy that is underperforming, particularly when it comes to employment growth, which is in no small part due to the failures of this government. The government is delusional when it looks at things such as the number of those holding construction jobs. This number of full-time jobs has fallen by nearly 5000 in the last two years. In the last two years of the Labor government almost three times as many jobs were created in total.
The Treasurer has boasted that there were 3900 jobs created under his government in the last two years, but in the last two years of the Labor government 21 600 jobs were created. The average growth rate in construction jobs since 2000 has been 7.9 per cent, and 3900 jobs amount to a mere 1.6 per cent increase.
In the last two years of Labor government the rate of construction jobs growth was 22.8 per cent. We are seeing figures right across the economy demonstrating that jobs are becoming harder to find. The most recent ANZ job advertisement research found that the number of Victorian job advertisements continues to fall. The research recorded a drop of 9.2 per cent for January, or 45.5 per cent for the year to February — the worst in the country. These are shocking figures, and they are further evidence that no action or plan is being undertaken by the Baillieu government. The consequence is that the Victorian economy is hurting, as are Victorian families. It seems that the government is far too concerned with dealing with its own internal shenanigans, whether it be the Deputy Premier or the member for Frankston, rather than working hard for the people of Victoria. Month after month we are seeing the Baillieu government fail to invest in jobs, infrastructure, manufacturing and skills — and the Victorian economy continues to go backwards.
If members look at the Treasurer’s promise — his target of creating more than 50 000 jobs — they will see it is nothing but a pipedream. The government has made it to 16 000 jobs over that period of time, which is a profound failure in terms of its target — it is about 32 per cent of the so-called target. Victoria’s unemployment rate is now at 6.1 per cent, which is up from the figure of 5.6 per cent for the previous month. Of the latest figures released the most distressing shows that 30 000 Victorian jobs were lost in the last month. That equates to close to 1000 fewer Victorians in work every day in January. Over the same period New South Wales saw some 250 jobs created every day.
Victoria is coming to a standstill with thousands of construction jobs lost and thousands more at risk as big infrastructure projects continue to wind up. They are the long tail of capital investment and plans from the previous government, and we see no replacement strategy from this government.
The most distressing figure is, of course, Victoria’s youth unemployment rate, which is now at a staggering 20.9 per cent compared to the 17.8 per cent nationwide. It is higher than in every other Australian state and territory, except for Tasmania. Victoria needs a government that gets people working.