posted on 2025-05-11, 07:44authored byPeter Waring, John Lewer
A decade since the introduction of enterprise bargaining in the federal jurisdiction provides a timely opportunity to critically review the evolution and operation of `the no disadvantage test'. The successor to the `public interest test' the mechanism has remained fundamental to regulators' assurances that workers, on the whole, would be ‘no worse off’ under enterprise bargaining. This paper however, contends that the test has evolved to the point where it is a far weaker benchmark measure than originally conceived. Examining legislative changes over the last ten years and drawing on case law, the authors argue the no disadvantage test has frayed to the extent that it is unable to safeguard workers' interests under a decentralised wages system. The authors posit the no disadvantage test must be reconstructed if the original intent of the test is to be preserved, and pose a number of alternative strategies to reinstate a genuine and fail safe mechanism to protect workers' wages and conditions.
History
Journal title
Labour and Industry: a Journal of the Social and Economics Relations of Work
Volume
12
Issue
1
Pagination
65-86
Publisher
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Centre for Workplace Culture Change