DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » Jobseekers system ‘failed’

Jobseekers system ‘failed’

Bruce MP Julian Hill has slammed Australia’s privatised unemployment system that makes people “do silly things that don’t help them to get a job” in a Parliamentary report recommending radical reforms.

Mr Hill, who chaired the inquiry into WorkForce Australia, reported that mutual obligations and its penalties on jobseekers was like “using a nuclear bomb to kill a mosquito”.

“It is ridiculous that over 70 per cent of people with providers have been subject to payment suspensions despite zero evidence that 70 per cent of people are cheating the system.”

Meanwhile the recent Robodebt Royal Commission had found that welfare fraud was “minuscule”, Mr Hill noted.

“People are made to do silly things that don’t help them get a job—such as pointless training courses or applying for jobs they won’t get—and are then harshly and repeatedly sanctioned for trivial or inadvertent breaches of prescriptive rules.”

Providers were “repeatedly trying to place jobseekers into unsuitable vacancies to chase outcomes payments”.

And employers “fled the system, dodging floods of inappropriate job applications”.

“It should not be controversial to conclude that that full marketisation has failed,” Mr Hill stated in the Rebuilding Employment Services report.

“The level and nature of competition is excessive and counterproductive, resulting in high levels of service saturation, fragmentation, and duplication yet without specialisation or localisation.”

Despite a “red-hot” labour market, more than 150,000 people have been in the system for more than five years.

“Too many people have not been skilled and prepared for this moment and the available jobs.”

In a submission to the inquiry, South East Community Links described a stark example of the current system’s failings.

A 61-year-old Afghan man missed an appointment with WorkForce Australia due to his wife having a heart attack. Despite sending a text to his case worker, his payments were stopped.

Despite working as a mechanic for 30 years, he was sent to do a mechanical apprenticeship.

Another client told SECL that WorkForce Australia treated him like a “lazy idiot”.

In contrast, SECL’s own Community Employment Connectors program helped more than 50 per cent of its mainly CALD-background clients get jobs.

It was voluntary, without penalties and not linked to Centrelink payments being continued or not.

Advocacy group Greater South East Melbourne (GSEM) submitted that many employers lost faith in the system.

“They don’t use government agencies to fill jobs gaps anymore because they get sent people for interviews who are there to tick their ‘mutual obligation’ scorecard, which wastes employers’ time and energy.”

The Rebuilding Employment Services report recommends the Government playing a more active role in a rebuilt employment services system with “new, modern objectives”.

This includes establishing a Government digital-hybrid provider that “aims to put the human back in human service” and to understand clients’ goals and circumstances.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Lakers first on the ladder after upset win against Knights

    Lakers first on the ladder after upset win against Knights

    The Dandenong District Cricket Association (DDCA) Turf 3 competition is heating up with the weekend’s results significantly reshaping the top four. Heading into round 13, Keysborough, Buckley Ridges, Springvale South…

  • Martin calls time on playing career and goes back to Bulls

    Martin calls time on playing career and goes back to Bulls

    One of the best local footballers to ever do it, Kyle Martin, has returned to Noble Park as an assistant coach after officially announcing his retirement as a player last…

  • Magpies remain in fourth

    Magpies remain in fourth

    Narre Warren managed to win a thriller against North Dandenong in the DDCA Turf 2 competition, holding onto victory by one wicket. The Maroons posted a healthy score of 223…

  • Silva century not enough as Bloods go 2-0 against Bucks

    Silva century not enough as Bloods go 2-0 against Bucks

    DDCA Turf 1 matches were headlined by a top of the table clash, and it was Springvale South who once again had the wood over Buckley Ridges. The Bucks have…

  • Bulls charge home to win

    Bulls charge home to win

    Dandenong West secured a brilliant comeback victory against Narre South in the Dandenong District Cricket Association (DDCA) Turf 1 competition to win by two wickets in what turned out to…

  • 11-dart leg puts Richardson in a class of her own

    11-dart leg puts Richardson in a class of her own

    Chris Richardson has produced one of the great highlights in the proud history of the Mountain Dart League with an incredible 11-dart leg in round three of Division 1 on…

  • Noble turn tamers against Lions

    Noble turn tamers against Lions

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 519204 Noble Park’s roller-coaster ride towards a place in the Victorian Sub-District Cricket Association (VSDCA) finals series has continued after a dominant day-one performance…

  • Housing focus for Canberra conference

    Housing focus for Canberra conference

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 344241 Greater Dandenong Council will call for social and affordable housing reforms at an upcoming national conference in Canberra. Mayor Sophie Tan and chief…

  • City of Casey unveils 2026 Community Award finalists

    City of Casey unveils 2026 Community Award finalists

    Casey Council has released their list of finalists for the 2026 Community Awards — out of the 135 nominations, 37 individuals and organisers have made the list. 20 years in…

  • Endangered bandicoots find refuge at future Clyde park

    Endangered bandicoots find refuge at future Clyde park

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 535867 Endangered southern brown bandicoots are already settling into the future Clyde Regional Park site, after local rangers trialled a “simple” habitat restoration program.…