City
Epaper

Intentional wage theft facing up to 10-year imprisonment in Australia

By IANS | Updated: January 1, 2025 16:45 IST

Canberra, Jan 1 Australia's new laws that took effect on Wednesday made intentional wage theft a criminal offence ...

Open in App

Canberra, Jan 1 Australia's new laws that took effect on Wednesday made intentional wage theft a criminal offence that would see dishonest heads of businesses being imprisoned for up to 10 years and facing hefty fines.

Some large companies in Australia have been involved in cases of underpayment scandals, such as Woolworths, Qantas, and 7-Eleven. However, the company directors currently can only be investigated according to civil laws, without the threat of imprisonment, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).

Under the Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Closing Loopholes) Act 2023, the government agency Fair Work Ombudsman can use the new tool to go after dishonest employers, with up to 10 years of jail terms and a fine up to nearly 7.83 million Australian dollars (4.87 million US dollars) for companies.

The new offence will apply to employers who intentionally engage in conduct that results in the underpayment of their employees. However, honest mistakes or miscalculations will not be caught by the wage theft offence, according to the Act.

Therefore, the employers' intention has to be proved in wage theft cases to exclude honest mistakes, which might be difficult in practice as "Fair Work has never had to prove intent under its existing civil powers," the ABC cited employment lawyer Daniel Victory as saying, Xinhua news agency reported.

The new laws will add more complexity to business, especially small business, criticised David Alexander, Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry's chief of policy and advocacy.

Meanwhile, the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations said last month that the newly registered Voluntary Small Business Wage Compliance Code provides employers with a clear pathway to avoid criminal prosecution for the new wage theft offence.

The Fair Work Ombudsman has also prepared guidance material on the steps employers can take to ensure they are paying staff correctly, the department said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

PunePune Road Accident: 1 Dead, 2 Injured After Bike Collides With Tempo Near Bhimashankar Sugar Factory

Other SportsDurand Cup: East Bengal and Mohun Bagan lock horns in high stakes Kolkata Derby QF

NationalShock in Jharkhand police after sub-inspector found dead in Adityapur, probe launched

NationalCouple in crime: Husband, girlfriend held in Rajasthan murder case

NationalSyro-Malabar Catholic Church slams CPI-M over remarks against Archbishop Pampalany

International Realted Stories

InternationalTrump briefs European leaders, Zelensky after meeting Putin

InternationalChinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on two-day India visit from Monday: MEA

InternationalTrade between US, Russia grew 20 per cent under Trump administration: Putin

InternationalIndia in stronger diplomatic position after Trump-Putin talk: Foreign affairs expert Robinder Sachdeva

InternationalEAM Jaishankar holds "productive" talks with South Korean Foreign Minister Cho Hyun; focus on defence, trade, AI