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10 Comments

  1. Keep up the good work, Frank. The NZ political-commercial arena is awash with self-serving liars who are wrecking everything that matters.

  2. Low wages means drivers have to work longer hours or drive faster to be more “productive” and make enough to live on. it also means high turn-over as workers desperately try to feed themselves and their families.

    to have undervalued workers in a high-turnover occupation means people are not paid or given time to do the extensive training needed to become a highly skilled driver.

    Government and industry cost-cutting mean bad, under-maintained roads.

    What do you think will be the result?

    NB The main proponent of “bad result = bad workers” in your text was actually Jim Mora who returned to the concept at least three times.

    “Jim Mora’s Panel” has long been turning into the Remuera hour (even the rich and complacent have the right to equal time according to the RNZ Charter). This was just another, somewhat egregious, self-exposure from our Jim.

  3. What pressures upon employers come from the Trucking industry organisations including this Labour / Act parasite.

    Fair competition of wages appear to have been stifled.

    This situation is becoming prevalent as “club” members rig the market our of public sight.

    The pattern shows what is happening.

    We also import drivers from low wage countries but they have a shadow controlling their free speech. What are they really paid.

  4. “Ken Shirley: “Well, indeed, and all the members I speak to want to, but there’s been a race to the bottom”

    Hah! Hoisted by his own petard! It’s about time the neo-liberal inconsistencies were drawn out and made public/

    The Emporer has no clothes!!

  5. One wonders if “small businesses in the regions who generally charge less will struggle to bear the cost” of Seymour’s salary?

    At one point in the discussion, a suggestion was made that low wages in the trucking industry is not attracting the most highly-skilled and experienced workers;

    Fun fact: The people we need the least (CEOs, politicians, bankers) are paid the most and the people we need the most (cleaners, nurses, drivers, teachers) are paid the least.

    Supply and demand doesn’t seem to apply to the rich because we certainly don’t need them. In fact, by their own accounting methods, we simply can’t afford them and history is replete with civilisations being destroyed by them.

    Why Garbagemen Should Earn More Than Bankers

  6. I worked with a client who had been a long-haul heavy truck driver. He was looking for work at the time but when I suggested he go back to driving trucks he declined because of the low hourly rate. Plenty of skilled drivers in NZ doing other jobs that pay better – guess that’s free market economics just there.

    1. Plenty of skilled drivers in NZ doing other jobs that pay better – guess that’s free market economics just there.

      Yep. And then employers will whinge to the government that they just can’t get people and that they have to import. The government will, of course, agree.

      They don’t like the idea that paying people more would get them the people that they need. They much prefer lowering wages and increasing profits that way.

  7. I personally know a number of truck drivers who have got out of the industry because of the low wages and the stress and demands of the jobs. If you are not being compensated adequately why do it ?

    I bet Ken Shirley has never driven a truck or got his hands dirty ever in his life ?

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