PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Keating, Paul

Period of Service: 20/12/1991 - 11/03/1996
Release Date:
21/04/1994
Release Type:
Media Release
Transcript ID:
9200
Document:
00009200.pdf 3 Page(s)
Released by:
  • Keating, Paul John
STATEMENT BY THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON PJ KEATING, MP INDUSTRY COMMISSION REPORT INTO WORKERS' COMPENSATION

PRIME MINISTER
STATEMENT BY THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON PJ KEATING, MP
INDUSTRY COMMISSION REPORT INTO WORKERS' COMPENSATION
The Commonwealth Government today released the Report of the Industry
Commission into Workers' Compensation in Australia.
In the report the Industry Commission has highlighted the economic and social
importance of workers' compensation and has identified deficiencies in current
arrangements which warranted careful consideration by Commonwealth, State and
Territory Governments.
Each year around 500 people die and 200,000 are injured in workplace accidents in
Australia. It is claimed that a further 20,000 cases of occupational disease go
,-nrecognised. Workers' compensation premiums account for about 17% of nonwage
labour costs.
There are ten main workers' compensation schemes in Australia, one in each State
and Territory and two under Commonwealth legislation. The Commission found that
significant differences exist among schemes in relation to their administration,
insurance arrangements, benefit levels/ structures, dispute resolution procedures
and rehabilitation and return to work strategies and programs.
The Industry Commission findings show that
the costsrising from work-related injury and illness to individuals, to firms
and to the community are large. The cost to Australia is estimated to be at
least $ 10 billion each year;
costs are shifted ( both ways) between workers' compensation schemes and
government programs often to the detriment of both;
the existing multiplicity of workers' compensation arrangements results in
inequity ( eg different benefit structures and entitlements) and inefficiency ( eg
national employers and their employees must cope with different rules in each
jurisdiction); and
better standards of service by insurers to injured workers and to employers
would help improve attitudes to good health and safety practice and, by

facilitating co-operative employee-employer relationships, help achieve good
return to work rates.
The Commission said, " the very scale of the problems in terms of people affected
and costs involved demands attention and emphasises why they should be
addressed as a matter of urgency".
The impact of actions by governments to influence the location decisions of
businesses by creating low benefit, low cost workers' compensation schemes was
also referred to by the Commission, which concluded that such schemes were
generally being paid for by other firms or taxpayers.
The Commission also concluded that competition at this level was unhealthy as it
eroded both benefits and incentives to reduce the cost of work related injury and
disease, and called for healthy competition which would lead to best practice in
prevention, rehabilitation and claims management.
The Commission's preferred approach involves:
putting in place agreed national benefits and supporting arrangements to limit
the extent of cost-shifting onto injured and ill workers and the community; while
at the same time
encouraging greater competition in the provision of insurance ( and other
services aimed at effective prevention and rehabilitation).
The Commission has recommended wide ranging changes in relation to prevention,
rehabilitation, compensation and licensing and prudential arrangements. In
particular, it has highlighted that an effectively structured compensation benefits
package combined with performance based premium systems, will create incentives
for employers and employees to reduce the incidence and costs of claims and that a
nationally consistent approach to these and associated administrative arrangements
will address equity, efficiency and cost sharing issues.
The government acknowledges there is room for substantial improvement in
Australia's workers' compensation arrangements and generally endorses the
directions for reform contained in the Commission's recommendations. However,
very careful consideration must be given to the design of any new, uniform, benefits
structure to ensure that an appropriate balance is achieved between the needs of
injured workers, the incentives for employers to maintain safety as well as the
implications for labour costs and employment. In this context, I note the
Commission's illustrative benefits structure which would create greater incentives to
reduce the costs of workpla ce injury -and illness but also involve at least a short term
increase in premium levels.
Consistent with the usual timetable for handling Industry Commission reports, the
Government will provide a detailed response to this report no later than August, with
a view to co-operatively developing a strategy for reform with the States and
Territories.

3
The next meeting of the, Labour Ministers Council in May would provide an early
opportunity for the States and Territories to provide initial comments on the Industry
Commission report.
CANBERRA
21 APRIL 1994
Copies of the report are available from Australian Government Bookshops.

9200