Learn about the 3 major cases that dealt with reducing hours of work in Australia.
44 Hour Week Case [1927]
The Amalgamated Engineering Union v. J. Alderdice & Company Pty. Ltd. and Others
(1927) 24 CAR 755, Dethridge CJ, Beeby J, Lukin J, 24 February 1927
Summary
In this decision the Arbitration Court decided to reduce ordinary weekly working hours in one industry from 48 to 44 by arbitration. It led to a gradual and more general reduction of hours across industries, and was one of the first test case decisions outside the issue of the minimum wage. As the decision records, there were already some industries working less than a 48 hour week including clerical, building trades, boot trades, waterside workers, flour-millers and shearers, some storemen and packers, shop assistants, rubber workers, clothing trades, and printing.
This case reduced weekly working hours in the engineering industry from 48 to 44 in the engineering industry.
This case consists of three separate judgments. Dethridge CJ and Beeby J formed the majority which granted the claim. Lukin J dissented.
The following passage from Justice Beeby’s decision sets the background:
Prior to the adoption by Australia through its State and Federal Parliaments of the prevailing system of industrial regulation, the recognized hours of employment in normal industries were 48 per week. The classification of industries was different from that of to-day, and employees in a great number of callings and occupations worked longer hours than those of the normal group. But mainly through awards of industrial tribunals, these exceptions to the standard were eliminated, until for all practical purposes, 48 hours as a maximum of working hours became universal. [p.865]
Chief Justice Dethridge distilled the basic tension:
If the product now being obtained by working a 48 hour week is being distributed so as to give the employers and capitalists only a fair share, employees cannot reasonably hope to obtain greater leisure at the expense of the employers. If, on the other hand, the employers or capitalists are taking an unduly large share, the workers are entitled to complain; and it would, perhaps, not be unnatural for them to say that, instead of attempting to obtain a larger share of the product for themselves, they would prefer to procure substantial justice by working fewer hours and thus by reducing the total production of wealth for the community deprive the employers and capitalists of their unfair surplus, and at the same time gain greater leisure for themselves. [p.764]
The Chief Justice continued:
Close examination of the evidence submitted did not elicit anything suggesting that excessive profits are being made in these trades as a whole ... In other industries of a monopolistic nature the profits may be sufficiently large. But there seems to be a widespread sincere belief among employees that the profits of employers generally are unduly large. And there seems to be a popular belief, equally sincere, that if the length of the working week be reduced the cost of the reduction will be borne by the employers ... Whether the reduction of working hours be just or unjust, the cost, if any, must substantially be paid by the public at large, and the extent of that cost is therefore a matter for very serious consideration. The existence, however, of the belief that employers take very excessive profits should not be ignored; it breeds suspicion and discontent, which have an evil influence on industry. [p.766]
In speculating on the impact of granting the claim, the Chief Justice provided a cautionary note on relying on analogous experiences:
We endeavoured to obtain evidence of the result in actual experience of the working of the 44-hour week. General prognostications of disaster on the one hand, or of uninjured prosperity on the other, are of little or no value. Nor do we get much assistance from the fact that when in Great Britain the daily working hours were reduced to ten, and then to nine, employers and others strenuously opposed the change and made woeful predictions, which proved to be wrong. Those predictions were made either ignoring or overlooking facts now admitted to be of essential importance. The facts that an unduly fatigued worker is an uneconomical worker, that the methods and mechanical appliances of industry continue to improve, and that Great Britain had at that time a long lead over other nations in the industrial race by reason of having been first in the field, were not given due weight. But the mere fact that these predictions were wrong should not induce us to allow our view of present conditions to become coloured. It is certainly not clear that the 48-hour week system, as now worked in industry, fatigues the workers so as to make it unprofitable, and it is certainly clear that Australia is behind other competing countries in her industrial development. [p.775]
Of workers, it was asserted that:
influenced by what they conceive to be a just resentment because the boon is being withheld, they have become slack in their work, and predictions were made that if [the claim] be granted they will use more energy, and assist in increasing output. [p.789]
Dethridge CJ held:
The conclusion cannot be evaded that the continuance of the 48-hour week is likely to be accompanied by an increase slackening and reduction of output among these classes of workers, which will largely off-set the output derived from the extra four hours’ work per week. [p.789]
The Chief Justice went on to discuss ‘general fair treatment’ across industries and reached a conclusion:
Workers in industries whose conditions are similar to those of the members in general of the claimant union can put forward an equal claim for the shorter week; but others not subject to a like strain, confinement, monotony, unremitting concentration of attention, or equivalent disadvantages affecting the opportunity or capacity for rational enjoyment of leisure, have not the same right. A uniform standard number of hours in the working week in all occupations, whether it be 48 or 44, really involves an unfair sharing, as between the workers in one and those in another industry, of such leisure as is permitted by the inexorable need for the community to work in order to maintain itself ... It will be gathered from what I have said that, in my opinion, the general shortening of the 48-hour working week would be fraught with danger to the workers themselves. No sufficient margin of production, actual or potential, beyond our present needs has been shown to exist which would justify the Court in sanctioning an all-round easeup. But I have come to the conclusion that the circumstances of the engineering industry, and of other industries whose workers are at a similar real disadvantage in respect of leisure, warrant the adoption of the 44-hour working week of five eight-hours’ days and one of four-hours’ day as the normal standard in those industries ... [p.791]
Justice Beeby noted relevant features of economic history:
that improvements of conditions of employment and of standards of living of working people have rarely been the result of concerted concession by employers. Proposals for industrial reform have usually been contested by those more engrossed in the material development of industry than in human problems. All epochal improvements of the past, the justice of which is not now disputed, have been the result of organized force or of legislation, not of voluntary concession. History is replete with prophecies of disaster which were to accompany legislative reductions of working hours, the regulation of child and women labour, the adoption of compulsory rules for better factory conditions, and other interferences with “freedom of contract”. [p.867]
In the face of a one twelfth reduction in hours corresponding to a one twelfth reduction in output and proportionate flow on effects, his Honour referred to the ability for industry to adapt:
the capacity of industries to adapt themselves to new standards was disregarded. It was assumed that none of the production lost through a shortening by four hours of the working week could be recovered by improved methods, the installation of more up-to-date equipment or better management ... Manufacturers in Australia do not dispute that they have much to learn and can always improve their plants and methods ... [p.886]
His Honour referred the momentum of the claim and the relatively minor costs:
Again the matter comes down to a balancing of advantages. Is it not better to endure a slight increase of payment for services than to suffer loss in other directions by refusing to remove one of the most prolific causes of industrial unrest ... The community will, of course, have to meet the added cost, but the total cost will not be nearly as heavy as was alleged, and distributed over the whole body of consumers will not be serious. [p.899]
Justice Lukin dissented, holding a ‘very strong opinion’ on the topic and declaring:
It is sufficient to say that in my opinion that great body of evidence indicates that the Australian manufacturer in this industry will be unable to withstand the further burden of a reduction of four hours with its accompanying decrease in output, its greater direct and indirect cost due to such reduced output and the lessened power to compete with overseas. [p.861]
Having considered the evidence in its entirety, Lukin J expounded that:
The conclusion to be drawn from the evidence is that the reduction of the standard hours ... spells retrogression, or at the best stagnation and not progression. Although it may not mean “industrial paralysis” or “economic disaster” ... as a consequence of further increases in the cost of production, it certainly does mean in my opinion very serious injury to the community of Australia generally and to this industry in particular. It means an undoubted decrease in output when a substantial increase is absolutely necessary to this young country, a seriously increased cost directly or indirectly of such reduced output, the accumulative effect of which it is very difficult to estimate or to foresee ... And all for what purpose? Admittedly not for what is necessary to secure to the worker a limitation of hours necessary to prevent sweating or over fatigue or ill health but to secure to him extra leisure, reasonable I recognize, if it were not for the too serious attendant consequences which it must occasion the community as a whole and this industry in particular. [p.864]
...
I am of opinion that the proposed reduction should not be granted. [p.865]
40 Hour Week Case [1947]
Standard Hours Inquiry [1947]
(1947) 59 CAR 581, Drake-Brockman CJ, Foster J, Sugarman J, 8 September 1947
Summary
In this decision the Arbitration Court decided to reduce the ordinary weekly working hours across the economy from 44 to 40. The decision was specifically economy wide in its application, although some industries were to be exempted for a period, and there was flexibility in timing of any reductions in hours of work. A large number of awards were varied as a direct result of the decision, and more awards were varied later following this decision.
In 1945, the Printing Industry Employees Union of Australia applied for a reduction of standard hours from 44 to 40 per week.
The Full Court recognised the impetus for the claim for a shorter week:
No realist for a minute thinks that a rejection by the Court in these cases would bring about industrial harmony or would abate for an instant the demand for the shorter week. History has shown how persistent in the past have been such claims. There is no reason to suspect that the future will differ. The claim is expressive of a world movement sanctioned by the International Labour Organization and already achieved in some countries. [p.590]
After noting that the matter affected ‘the whole economic future of the continent’ and the ‘standard of living of every man, woman and child in Australia’ [p.592], the Court remarked that the ‘popular will’ should not be ignored, and hence:
The facts therefore that four States ... have pressed the Court to settle all these disputes by granting forthwith a 40-hour week in each case are matters of the greatest import. [p.588–9]
The employers outlined a number of concerns with the granting of a 40 hour week. A major concern related to shortages in ‘almost all commodities’. The Court accepted that:
Explanations of these shortages are easy enough; the war and the diversion of our resources to that supremely wasteful enterprise, the accumulated housing shortage never overtaken since the 1930 depression, progress in the conception of what constitutes adequate housing, the fall in the birth rate during the depression which now results in fewer young people of employable age which aggravates the labour shortage ... The disorganisation of the economy due to the transition from war to peace. The unsettlement of the workers after a war. The loss of six years in training of our labour force. The greatly increased marriage rate which took many women out of industry and put them in the market for homes. The fact that shortages are a relative matter - a relation between supply and demand - and there has been a greatly enhanced demand without a corresponding increase in supply. The wasteful results of bottlenecks and uneven flow of goods. [p.594]
It concluded:
We do not regard these shortages in all the present circumstances as a reason for refusing the claims now ... [p.595]
In assessing the effects on production the Court accepted statistical and economic evidence that:
in terms of a percentage loss of production overall ... was not more than 5 per cent ... to trace the effects of that lost production through the community by way of the cost price structure ... the overall price rise should not exceed 4 per cent. [p.598]
Before concluding that:
the fall in production will be less than feared by employer witnesses and will be fairly rapidly overtaken. [p.599]
In terms of increased costs to the community the Court noted that ‘if the community desires any change which adds to costs, it must be prepared to bear them’. Further:
The Court must assume the Australian Government has, by its support of these claims, in effect informed the Court that it is not alarmed about the financial burden. [p.602]
The Court examined the economy:
All criteria of an active virile progressive economy are present to-day. Our population has increased and all are working. Our sources of power are taxed to their limit and that limit [is] higher than ever before. Business is showing a continuous unsatisfied demand for products of all kinds. Orders sufficient to maintain activity at the highest levels are booked for years ahead over a wide range of industry. Many industrial undertakings are expanding their capital to a total extent of millions of pounds and prospectuses indicated very good prospects. Overseas companies are finding in Australia increasing opportunity for further extention and development of their enterprises, while the reports of local companies are generally optimistic. The profit rate continues at high levels and substantially above the relation to gilt edge securities usually expected. [p.599]
It held:
the appropriate time to add burdens to industry or, from another angle, to give ourselves added benefits, is when industry is booming and when nature is bountiful. [p.599]
The claim was granted. The rural industry was exempted as they were ‘unsheltered producers and [were] to be the main bearers of any cost increase occasioned’. However, the Court pointed out ‘that ultimately they may be adjusted to fall more closely into line’, as cost increases should ‘be comfortably carried because of the very greatly enhanced prices of rural products ... which look[ed] like being maintained for a substantial period of years’. [p.602]
The Court acknowledged that a period of adjustment would be needed:
An absolute rigidity might well hamper a swift and orderly transition by the creation of temporary bottlenecks thus resulting in undue prolongation of the period of shortage, and by rendering difficult or impossible such redistribution of man-power resources as the introduction of a standard working week of 40 hours may necessitate. The exigencies of continuous shift work may in particular require the working of somewhat longer hours than 40 for some time to come. It is for such reasons as these and not in any spirit of compromise or evading the real issue ... that we propose to introduce into our order certain provisions with respect to the working of overtime. [p.609]
38 Hour Week Wage Principle [1983]
National Wage Case, September 1983
Print F2900, Moore, Williams, Isaac, Cohen, Booth, McLagan, 23 September 1983
Summary
In this decision the Australian Conciliation and Arbitration Commission introduced a package of 11 binding guidelines setting out what changes to award wages and conditions would be approved by it. It introduced a new ‘Principle 5 Standard Hours’ for the first time. This principle allowed the Commission to approve agreements for the introduction of a 38 hour week to replace the usual 40 hour week, provided that ‘the cost impact of the shorter week should be minimized’, and ‘the Commission should satisfy itself that as much as possible of the required cost offset is achieved by changes in work practices’. The Commission would reject claims for a 38 hour week which were opposed, and would reject all claims for a reduction of hours below 38.
The new principle replaced the earlier approach of ad hoc consideration of agreements for the introduction of a 38 hour week, and to some extent formalised the approach taken by the Commission to such matters (see Print F1600, guideline 4, p.9). This led to a large number of agreements for the introduction of a 38 hour week across the economy. Principle 5 provided:
5. Standard Hours
(a) In dealing with agreements and unopposed claims for a reduction in standard hours to 38 per week, the cost impact of the shorter week should be minimized. Accordingly, the Commission should satisfy itself that as much as possible of the required cost offset is achieve by changes in work practices.
Opposed claims should be rejected.
(b) Claims for reduction in standard weekly hours below 38, even with full cost offsets, should not be allowed.
(c) The Commission should not approve or award improvements in pay or other conditions on the basis of productivity bargaining. These improvements should only be allowed on the basis of the appropriate Principles.
In the June 1986 National Wage Case decision (Print G3600), the Commission removed the requirement that the introduction of the 38 hour week be the subject of agreement. The Commission would be willing in appropriate cases to arbitrate and order the amendment of the award to include the 38 hour week even if this was opposed by the employer. Other aspects of the principle remained the same. The new Principle 5 provided:
5. Standard Hours
(a) In dealing with claims for a reduction in standard hours to 38 per week, the cost impact of the shorter week should be minimized. Accordingly, the Commission should satisfy itself that as much as possible of the required cost offset is achieved by changes in work practices.
(b) Claims for reduction in standard weekly hours below 38, even with full cost offsets, should not be allowed.
(c) The Commission should not approve or award improvements in pay or other conditions on the basis of productivity bargaining. These improvements should only be allowed on the basis of the appropriate Principles.
The Commission said that it was not establishing the 38 hour week as a ‘standard’. Gradually the remaining federal and State awards providing for a 40 hour week were amended.
The Fair Work Act 2009 provides that the 38 hour week averaged over stated periods is a ‘National Employment Standard’ (see section 61), and this is reflected in the 122 modern awards established in 2010 (see also Work Choices section 62).