Qantas is trying to save jobs, says Joyce

Qantas is trying to save jobs, says Joyce
By admin


Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce says he is trying to avoid impacts on workers as the airline proceeds with a turnaround plan that includes cutting 5000 jobs.

The target, part of a $2 billion cost-cutting program, represents a quarter of the savings being pursued, Joyce told a Senate inquiry on Friday.

Labour-related expenses make up 40% of the airline's "controllable costs".

"So proportionally we are trying to avoid impacts on labour compared to what we're doing with the rest of the organisation," Joyce said.

The Qantas boss appeared before a Senate inquiry into the future of Qantas, called to investigate the airline's demand for support from the government through either a debt guarantee or a loosening of foreign ownership caps.

The federal government has rejected a debt guarantee but has given its support to changing the Qantas Sale Act, which caps foreign ownership at 49% – a move the federal opposition is resisting.

In an opening statement to the inquiry – read by chief financial officer Gareth Evans to allow a laryngitis-afflicted Joyce to save his voice for questioning – Qantas said its future was under threat because of an uneven playing field.

Virgin Australia's foreign stakeholders had recently poured $300 million into capacity increases while Virgin was making losses, Evans said.

"It would be naive for anyone to think these sovereign airlines don't have an agenda in bankrolling our competitor. They do," he said.

"It is a strategy directed at weakening Qantas and promoting the interests of Virgin's foreign owners."

Unions are concerned changes to the 49% cap on foreign ownership would result in jobs going offshore, but Joyce said he believed Qantas staff understood the need to make tough decisions to secure the airline's future.

"For Qantas to compete on a level playing field with its competitor here, it needs to have the same access to foreign capital that its competitor has," he said.

Earlier, Transport Workers Union national secretary Tony Sheldon told the inquiry Qantas ground crew were earning $200 a week less than the national minimum wage because they were offered only part-time work.

The committee heard Qantas was paying the legal hourly rate but Sheldon said workers were getting just more than 20 hours' work a week and roster uncertainty made it hard to take a second job.

Joyce said Qantas wanted the same flexibility in its workforce that Virgin enjoyed.

"We are not asking full-time employees to convert to part time," he said.

"We are recruiting more part-time employees to give us the flexibility to manage the schedule."

Joyce also said that, regardless of any increase in foreign ownership, Qantas would still help evacuate Australians in the event of an international disaster.

"I think that's a core part of who we are," he said.

"I don't think that will ever change."

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