Inghams staff walkout over pay stokes concerns of chook shortage
The news: Workers have gone on strike over claims of paltry pay at poultry producer Inghams, raising fears of a chicken shortage that could affect the likes of McDonald's, KFC and Woolworths.
The numbers: More than 1000 Australian Workers' Union (AWU) and Australian Manufacturing Workers’ Union (AMWU) members stopped work for 24 hours at the company's Bolivar site in South Australia and at Osborne Park in Western Australia on Friday in pursuit of a six per cent per annum pay rise over three years. Inghams produces about 40 per cent of Australia's chickens and supplies brands such as McDonald's, KFC and Woolworths.
The context: The parties are expected to reach a compromise, with annual pay rises falling somewhere between the union's claims and management's offer of between 3.45 per cent and 3.9 per cent per year.
What they said: "Given a live supply chain, prolonged industrial action would be quite disruptive and begin to impact Inghams' ability to supply chickens to its customers," E&P Capital retail analyst Phillip Kimber said in a note to investors.
"We know that Inghams is an extremely profitable company and that those profits have more than doubled in recent times, so why is it that the workers who show up to do a difficult job are asked to cop paltry wages?" AWU national secretary Tim Kennedy said in a statement.
"An extra $1.50-per-hour will barely even register on Inghams’ bottom line and workers won’t be running out buying yachts or enjoying champagne dinners as a result, but they might just be able to keep up with increased housing costs without falling below the poverty line."
The source: AAP