The Accord progressed through seven stages in which it was revised significantly.
Original Accord (1983) The first Accord was implemented after
Bob Hawke was elected to power in March 1983, but was the product of a long series of prior negotiations between the ALP and ACTU. To commence the Accord, a National Economic Summit was convened between federal and state governments, unions, and businesses. This was important in securing the business community's support for the reintroduction of centralised wage fixing, by endorsing it as a mechanism of wage restraint. The first Accord was broad in scope, covering wages, prices, non-wage remuneration, taxation, and government expenditure. It aimed to provide a "social wage" in lieu of wage rises. Some of its key outcomes included the following. • Full wage indexation to the
Consumer Price Index (CPI), meaning that wages were fixed to the cost of living. • Unions committed to make "no extra claims" above or outside this wages policy. • The reintroduction of universal public healthcare (under the name
Medicare). • The establishment of the Prices Surveillance Authority which monitored prices in the economy (but did not have the ability to
control prices). • The establishment of
tripartite councils (between government, unions, and business) including the
Economic Planning and Advisory Council and several industry councils. These bodies were for consultation in government decision-making. • Tax cuts for low- and middle-income earners. • The introduction of a
National Occupational Health and Safety Commission. Additionally, other outcomes of the Accord's first three years include the following: increases to family payments; improvements to childcare; introducing various
tax avoidance measures; increased pensions; increased unemployment benefits; and, cuts to the top personal income tax rate from 60 cents to 47 cents on the dollar.
Accord Mark II (1985) Two years into the Accord, a falling Australian dollar made imports more expensive, hence adding to inflation. Under the terms of the original Accord, wages would be raised in proportion to the inflated price of consumer goods. The government saw a break with wage indexation as a way to stem the inflation. Also, they saw the devalued dollar as an opportunity to improve the country's
trade deficit as long as they could prevent labour costs from rising. Negotiations were made and a second edition of the Accord was established in September 1985. In this agreement, wages were discounted 2% below the index in exchange for personal income tax cuts and a 3% superannuation contribution. This wage-tax-superannuation deal purported to keep
real wages consistent while lowering labour costs in the economy.
Accord Mark III (1987) The third edition of the Accord, established in March 1987, marked the end of formal wage indexation and the introduction of a two-tiered system. The first tier was a general wage increase of $10 per week and the second tier was an increase of up to 4%, conditional on implementing certain efficiency improvements. This agreement represented a significant shift away from determining wages based on the cost of living and towards determining them based on productivity.
Accord Mark IV (1988) The fourth edition of the Accord, established in August 1988, established what it termed the Structural Efficiency Principal (SEP). This principal conferred wage increases to unions who committed to restructuring their
industrial awards in the interests of efficiency. Importantly, this was the start of the award restructuring process. The SEP was another two-tiered system, but with a different scope to the previous one. While the previous Accord tended to promote short-term cost-cutting measures, the SEP had a broad, positive conception of productivity improvement. It encouraged unions to establish skill-based career pathways; training opportunities; broaden the range of tasks each worker could perform, to enable multi-skilling; and minimise
demarcation disputes; among other things.
Accord Mark V (1989) The fifth edition of the Accord, established in August 1989, continued the process of award restructuring. Wage rises were granted to unions on the condition that they continued implementing the recommendations of the previous Accord. Additionally, their awards would need to permit greater flexibility in working hours and change certain sick leave entitlements.
Broadbanding was another aspect of award restructuring that was used to promote efficiency. This agreement also included further cuts to personal income taxes as well as some rebates and supplements for families and households.
Accord Mark VI (1990) The sixth agreement of the Accord was reached in February 1990. Significantly, it introduced
enterprise bargaining. It also built upon the elements of previous Accords, including superannuation, tax cuts, and productivity-based pay bargaining. However, in November, the
Australian Industrial Relations Commission (AIRC) announced their decision to reject this agreement. They stated that employers and trade unions were not yet ready for enterprise bargaining because they held differing perspectives on this reform that they would first need to resolve. Instead of the various elements of the agreement, the AIRC granted a conditional 2.5% pay rise.
Accord Mark VII (1991) In October 1991, the AIRC acceded to calls to introduce
enterprise bargaining, hence allowing unions to make bargaining agreements with individual employers. The award system remained as a way to protect minimum standards, but enterprise agreements could be negotiated above the award's standards. This seventh edition of the Accord was hugely influential: it began a process of decentralisation from national, industry-wide agreements and awards to the enterprise level.
End of the Accords (1996) An eighth edition of the Accord (Accord Mark VIII) was planned to be implemented after the
1996 election. It promised to target a low inflation rate of 2–3%, to provide extra "safety net" payments to some workers, and to include an extra maternity leave allowance among other things. However, since Labor did not win the election, this plan was never implemented. The election of
John Howard in March 1996 brought a dramatically different economic approach. The new
Liberal government sought to further
deregulate the labour market by ending wage fixing practices and instead allowing market forces to determine wages. This marked the end of the Accord period and began a period of heightened antagonism between the government and the union movement. == Results ==