The Albanese Labor Government did close labour hire loopholes through the Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Closing Loopholes) Act 2023, which received Royal Assent on 14 December 2023 [1].
The reforms introduced "same job, same pay" legislation allowing the Fair Work Commission to make orders requiring labour hire workers to be paid no less than comparable directly employed workers [2].
**Coal Mining Wage Increases**
The claims regarding coal miners' wage increases are substantially verified.
* * * * 炭鉱 nounTankou 賃上げ nounChin'age * * * *
According to the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations, 90 workers at a NSW coal mine (Boggabri Coal Operations) secured pay increases between $15,600 and $35,000 [3].
BHP agreed to pay out substantial sums to approximately 2,200 Central Queensland miners following Fair Work Commission backing of the Same Job Same Pay reforms [5].
**Meat Processing Wage Increases**
The claim of "up to 42%" wage increases for meat processors is verified.
Workers at an Australian Country Choice Production meatworks facility, employed by labour hire firms FIP Group and Task Labour Services, saw pay rises of up to 25 percent [6].
The ministerial statement indicates "approximately 200 meat workers" received an additional $500 per week from these reforms [7].
**Implementation Timeline**
The reforms commenced on 15 December 2023, with regulated labour hire arrangement orders taking effect from 1 November 2024 [2], [8].
However, the claim omits several important contextual factors:
**Scale of Impact**: While the wage increases are substantial for affected individuals, the reforms only apply to labour hire workers in specific industries (mining, aviation, meat processing, warehousing) where host employers have enterprise agreements or equivalent instruments [2].
The total number of workers benefiting—described in government statements as "thousands"—represents a small fraction of Australia's 13+ million workforce.
**Application Requirements**: The "same job, same pay" orders only apply where the host organisation has an enterprise agreement or equivalent instrument [2].
Without an enterprise agreement, labour hire workers cannot access these protections, significantly limiting the policy's scope.
**Implementation Challenges**: The legislation requires workers or their unions to actively apply to the Fair Work Commission for orders [8].
The FWC states it will attempt to resolve disputes through mediation first, except in exceptional circumstances [8].
**Previous Wage Suppression**: The claim frames these increases as achievements, but they primarily represent correction of wage suppression that existed under the previous labour hire arrangement.
These are wage levels workers would have received under direct employment all along—not new gains but restoration of wages appropriate to the work performed.
**Regional Concentration**: The substantial wage increases cited (particularly the $15,600-$35,000 figures) are heavily concentrated in NSW coal mining and Queensland mining sectors.
Information on other industries (aviation, warehousing, meat processing) shows more varied outcomes.
**Meat Processing Disparity**: While the claim cites "up to 42%" for meat processors, the more specific figure of 25% for the largest case study (Australian Country Choice) suggests the maximum may be less commonly achieved.
Narrative**: The government frames these as achievements, but they are primarily correcting a longstanding structural inequity—labour hire workers being paid substantially less than permanent employees for identical work.
This is not an "achievement" in the sense of creating new benefits, but rather ending systematic underpayment.
**Incomplete Reform**: The requirement for enterprise agreements or equivalent instruments as a precondition means many labour hire workers in industries without strong collective bargaining remain unprotected [2].
This fundamentally limits the reform's scope.
**Burden on Workers**: By requiring workers to apply to the Fair Work Commission for orders rather than making same job, same pay automatic, the government places the burden of accessing these protections on workers and their unions—a process that requires resources, legal knowledge, and persistence.
**Evidence of Previous Failure**: The need for these reforms actually demonstrates how comprehensively the previous regulatory framework failed to protect labour hire workers.
The scale of underpayment uncovered (up to $35,000 annually) reveals systemic exploitation that existed for years despite existing labour laws.
**Coverage Gaps**: Industries like retail, hospitality, and other sectors with significant labour hire workforces but less developed union presence or enterprise agreements remain largely unprotected by these reforms.
Many European countries (France, Germany) have more comprehensive protections that automatically apply equal treatment without requiring worker applications [9].
The specific wage increases claimed for coal miners ($15,600-$35,000) and meat processors (up to 42%) are factually accurate based on Department of Employment and Workplace Relations announcements and Fair Work Commission orders.
However, the claim obscures that these are corrections of prior wage suppression rather than new gains, requires ongoing worker application to access, and applies only to workers where enterprise agreements exist.
The specific wage increases claimed for coal miners ($15,600-$35,000) and meat processors (up to 42%) are factually accurate based on Department of Employment and Workplace Relations announcements and Fair Work Commission orders.
However, the claim obscures that these are corrections of prior wage suppression rather than new gains, requires ongoing worker application to access, and applies only to workers where enterprise agreements exist.