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    Qantas chief slams pro-Australia laws

    Qantas chief Alan Joyce on Monday warned the airline would be forced to slash services and expressed "grave fears" for its future if proposed laws strengthening its ties to Australia went ahead.

    Joyce said a bill forcing Qantas to keep its headquarters and the majority of maintenance, flight operations and training in Australia, would pose a "major threat" to the airline's business and to jobs.

    "If Australians want a truly competitive national carrier, this parliament cannot tie up Qantas in this way," Joyce told a Senate hearing into the proposal.

    "You would be responsible for making Qantas less competitive just when we most need the freedom to compete."

    Put forward by independent Senator Nick Xenophon, the so-called "Still Call Australia Home" bill aims to tighten conditions set down when the formerly state-owned airline was sold off in 1992.

    Xenophon has also proposed amending aircraft crew laws to force all Australian airlines and their subsidiaries to offer overseas-based flight and cabin crew on its services the same wages and conditions as local staff.

    Joyce said foreign crew were only used on a limited number of Qantas flights in Australia but they were paid "domicile country" rates -- a standard international practice that was vital to keeping those services viable.

    "The proposed amendments would quite simply force the Qantas Group to withdraw from services connecting Darwin and Cairns to the tourism and trade markets of Asia and Europe," Joyce told lawmakers.

    Xenophon dismissed the claims as "ridiculous" and questioned whether Qantas was saying that "in order to survive in Australia, it has to rely on cheap overseas crews".

    The proposals follow a bumpy year for Qantas in 2011 which saw its entire worldwide fleet grounded for 48 hours as part of a protracted labour row with staff over plans to shift its ailing international arm to Asia.

    Angry unions repeatedly walked off the job, accusing Irish-born Joyce of attempting to "Asianise" Qantas and outsource jobs in the name of profit.

    The dispute cost Qantas Aus$194 million (US$208 million), but Joyce has insisted he will push ahead with the plan, which hinges on the establishment of budget carrier Jetstar Japan and a second Asia-based joint-venture premium airline.

    Australia's Tourism Export Council (ATEC) lobby group said Xenophon's bill was an "unfair and direct assault on Qantas's capacity to be competitive in the Asian market".

    "Introducing significant limitations on how the airline operates and its capacity to be productive and viable could drive it into the ground, and many local tourism businesses with it," said ATEC chief Felicia Mariani.

    Joyce urged the Senate committee to remember the "global and national realities that frame our times" including debt strains in the US and Europe, warnings of deep downturns from the IMF and World Bank and local job losses.

    Ratings agency Moodys downgraded Qantas's long-term senior unsecured rating to Baa3 from Baa2 with a stable outlook last week, citing high fuel prices, strong competition and a difficult operating environment.

    "The reality is simple -- we must all adapt or die. At Qantas we want to adapt, we must adapt if we are to survive," Joyce said.

    The Qantas share price added 0.62 percent to Aus$1.62.

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    3 comments

    • A Yahoo! User  •  Bacoor, Philippines  •  3 months ago
      The maritime industry of Australia has been destroyed and growth is not possible because of the same rules......How come the airline industry does not have to follow the same rules. We need a common law to reflect business. I agree in domicile salaries out outsourcing our maintenance and technical to cheaper global areas just as Australia exports managerial talent overseas......Do you think BHP mines in Africa are run by African top management or Australian businesses in Asia are run by Filipino, Chinese and other asian managers.....NO WAY......Come on Australia wake up...this is a global market and sending work overseas can benefit all nations......
    • CS  •  Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam  •  3 months ago
      You are right Mr.Stuart all those protectionist are blind !!!
      Like the europeans they only wanted high salaries but never think of survival and competitveness when they go bankrupt they blame others like money under value, salaries too low, human right.....etc...etc...WHEN YOUR STOMACH IS HUNGRY WHAT ELSE YOU CAN TALK???
      They never wake up and reflect their greedy face in the mirror, very very sad to see all these short sighted people!!!
    • DarkMax  •  Singapore, Singapore  •  3 months ago
      The years of Qantas being spoilt by the Australian government has finally bear fruit. Protectionism does not promote competitiveness, but what it does incur is higher costs, in monetary and economical terms.

      If Australian government had allowed Singapore Airlines to fly the Sydney-LAX route, Qantas would have buckle up a long time ago under competitive stress.

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