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Australia Roundup: Hundreds of Restaurants Close Rather Than Pay 250% Holiday tax

IMG Auteur
Publié le 28 janvier 2013
867 mots - Temps de lecture : 2 - 3 minutes
( 3 votes, 3,7/5 ) , 2 commentaires
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SUIVRE : Swift

It's time once again to take a look at happenings down under. Restaurants are closing en masse rather than pay double time and a half to stay open on holidays.

Please consider
Penalties blamed for taking high-end dining off menu.

The annual survey of the 7500- member Restaurant and Catering Australia reveals a 33 per cent jump since 2011 in the numbers of restaurateurs saying they cannot afford to open on public holidays.

Public holiday penalty rates require employers to pay double time and a half, equating to pay rates of at least $40 an hour.

Robert Marchetti, executive chef of Sydney's Icebergs Dining Room and Bar and North Bondi Italian Food and owner of highly acclaimed restaurants in Sydney and Melbourne, said some of his businesses - including Neild Avenue - would be closed today, while those that opened would be providing a "public service".

"The government are a bunch of monkeys who don't understand business," he said.

"We're not living in the 1960s anymore. Australia has its head stuck up its arse on IR.

Following ACTU Secretary Dave Oliver's Christmas Eve call for the Fair Work Act to be changed to enshrine penalty rates as a minimum entitlement, United Voice liquor and hospitality division Secretary Tara Moriarty said the issue was one the industry raised every public holiday.

"Penalty rates haven't made the sky fall in yet, despite them constantly making suggestions to the contrary," she said.

Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association national secretary Joe De Bruyn said the closure of some businesses on public holidays would simply mean more business for the restaurants that stayed open.

"Penalty rates have been part of workers' entitlements for decades," he said.

Unions were awaiting the outcome of a Fair Work Australia hearing on penalty rates. "While the unions put up a very strong case for preserving penalty rates, the employers' case was a pathetic performance," Mr De Bruyn said.

Double-Time and a Half Insanity

You have to love the mentality "the sky is not falling yet" mantra, especially when it clearly is.

Who pays for this absurdity? Consumers in general of course. Business owners and employees of businesses who cannot afford to pay double-time and a half, also get hit hard.

House and Land Incentives

Property Observer notes House-and-land incentive and discounts from $5,000 to $126,000

New housing finance and building approval figures suggest there will be no swift rebound in demand for new housing.

There was a 10.3% fall in home loan commitments for new dwellings and a 0.3% drop in building approvals for new houses in November, according to seasonally adjusted ABS figures.

New home buyers can secure discounts in the thousands and sometimes tens of thousands of dollars on select blocks of lands and new homes in Melbourne, the Gold Coast and Sydney.

There are also generous first-home buyer incentives on offer from NSW, Queensland, Tasmanian and South Australian state governments for those buying or building new homes.

$30,000

Listed residential developer Peet is offering savings of up to $30,000 on “certain lots” in residential communities on the outskirts of Melbourne.

$22,000

Listed developer Devine is offering to pay mortgage repayments for up to a year on behalf of approved purchasers who sign an unconditional contract to purchase a new Devine house and land package before February 28 2013 under its Devine Mortgage Break promotion.

Melbourne builder Carlisle Homes is offering a $30,000 discount off the retail price of double-storey homes and $22,000 off the retail price of single-storey homes in its luxury Affinity and T Range collections. There is currently no end date to this promotion.

$10,000

Up until February 25 2013, Stockland is offering approved purchasers a $10,000 VISA gift card to spend as they wish.

$76,000 - $126,000

Discounts of up to $126,000 are on offer for residential lots in The Highlands community in the Ecovillage, Currumbin Valley on the Gold Coast.

Massive Housing Incentive, Still No Buyers

Macrobusiness reports Developers Go Completely Mad.

Today, Property Observer has provided a comprehensive list of incentives being offered by developers in a bid to lift sales, which are in addition to generous incentives on offer in New South Wales, Queensland, Tasmania and South Australia.

Clearly, such developer incentives are failing to stimulate demand and could actually be precluding the new home market from functioning properly.

Australia’s property development industry appears to be caught in a pincer. If they don’t abandon incentives in favour of transparent land price deductions, financing of new house and land packages will remain problematic and sales will likely continue to struggle. At the same time, reducing the listed price by the same value as the bonuses and incentives being offered could lower their collateral value, potentially triggering the banks to call in more equity from bank-financed developers to bring their loans back to agreed conditions and/or loan terms. Straight price cuts are also more likely to aggrieve recent purchasers that paid higher prices.

How Fast the Collapse?

The housing bubble in Australia has clearly burst. All that remains to be seen is how fast things collapse.

Meanwhile, Australia's unions still cling to an already dead model, oblivious to the fact the boom is over.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


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Yeah I have to agree with SW. Australia actually has proper prudential regulatory bodies that actually do regulate the banks and financial institutions. Not that it doesn't have it's problems from time to time but we don't have that same level of sub prime fraud the "big" banks used to fleece so many investors. Inner city accommodation is expensive because there are plenty of people who want to live there, the outer lying suburbs are sprawling , ridiculous and ugly, like most suburbs but stupid people need a place to live too. Nevertheless Australia's debt/ GDP is only like 30 % or something, total debt is like 300 billion ( thanks to labor although you could argue it was a reasonable policy under the circumstances I grant you) which would be a tiny bail out by US or EU standards. Australians don't know how lucky they are. Travelling around you can see the crap conditions most of the rest of the world lives in while people in Australia bitch when their coffee is not hot enough or because the line of SUVs is too long when they drop their kids off to private school. Australia will have to recalibrate it's expectations like the rest of the world but quite likely not by as much.
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Walked past that North Bondi restaurant on saturday evening. It was absolutely jam packed,as it always is!

As for house prices,they are just like any other market,up and down.
Maybe those dopey land developers should take a good hard look at where they are developing...nobody wants to live there.
Last year australia's annual population growth doubled from 165,000 to 330,000 with half being migrants and the other half new borns.
They all have to be housed somewhere and rentals are very tight.
The economy is strong, unemployment is low and there are plenty of jobs.

And Mish ( i like your work) but... you're off the mark here.
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Yeah I have to agree with SW. Australia actually has proper prudential regulatory bodies that actually do regulate the banks and financial institutions. Not that it doesn't have it's problems from time to time but we don't have that same level of sub pri  Lire la suite
mgadams - 29/01/2013 à 03:14 GMT
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