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Article

16 Giu 2021

Author:
Trade Union Congress,
Author:
Australian Council of Trade Unions

Australian and UK unions' statement on UK-Australia trade deal

'Australian and UK unions' statement on UK-Australia trade deal', 16 June 2021

"The UK and Australian Government are set to announce an in-principle agreement at the G7 summit this weekend on the UK-Australia Free Trade Agreement that has been negotiated in secret for almost a year.  

Workers have been kept in the dark throughout the negotiations, with trade unions not consulted about the text of the agreement and its impact on workers. There has been no independent economic modelling to demonstrate that the Agreement will create good jobs in each country. 

The Trade Unions Congress (TUC) and the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) released a joint statement in September 2020[1] outlining the expectations of workers in both countries about the content of a free trade agreement. 

Yet, information available about the negotiations indicates it is failing to meet the goals set out by the unions at the start of negotiations.

The ACTU and TUC call on the Australian and UK Governments to immediately engage with trade unions to  address our concerns about the trade negotiations.

There are threats that the UK-Australia trade deal may:

  • include Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS), which gives multinational corporations special rights to sue governments over actions that threaten their profits which could including renationalising public services or introducing new workers’ rights
  • not contain measures to adequately enforce and protect labour rights;
  • not allow governments to maintain skills testing requirements for industries and professions and domestic labour market testing processes;
  • contain a ‘youth mobility scheme’ that does not have adequate measures to ensure the rights of young migrant workers are respected;
  • not protect public services from being locked into privatisation;
  • not adequately protect the right of our governments to regulate in the public interest;
  • not protect the ability of our governments to regulate the digital economy and guarantee protections for personal data."

Part of the following timelines

UK Trade Policy

UK-Australia trade deal signed