Home Australia Australian PM Launches Cash For Apprentices Policy Ahead Of Polls

Australian PM Launches Cash For Apprentices Policy Ahead Of Polls

The incentives will cost around A$627 million over four years, with the aim of hitting the Australian government's target of building 1.2 million homes in the next five years.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks to the media during a signing ceremony at the Australian Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, June 17, 2024. Lukas Coch/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has unveiled cash incentives aimed at drawing apprentices to the country’s strained construction industry, building on billions of dollars in additional spending just months ahead of the upcoming general election.

Construction apprentices in Australia will be offered a cash incentive of A$10,000 ($6,281) each, Albanese said in a speech on Friday which was seen as setting the scene for an election that must be held by May.

“Many apprentices have said they could earn more stacking shelves at the supermarket – and too many leave training, because they can’t afford to stay,” he said in an address to the National Press Club in the capital Canberra.

“Our government wants to encourage more Australians to learn a trade and stay in construction.”

The incentives will cost around A$627 million over four years, with the aim of hitting the government’s target of building 1.2 million homes in the next five years.

Housing Crisis Deepens

Decades of booming demand and constricted supply have made Australia’s housing market among the most unaffordable in the world, with successive governments failing to hit house-building targets.

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Housing is the largest contributor to a rising cost of living in Australia, that is expected to be one of the major campaigning issues for parties in the upcoming election.

Albanese‘s centre-left Labour Party has a majority in the lower house of Parliament, but is narrowly trailing the conservative opposition coalition in opinion polls released this week.

This means that it may be reliant on minor parties like the Greens to form a government if it emerges as the largest party in this year’s election but fails to secure another majority.

Albanese’s apprentice incentive announcement takes government pledges made in recent months past A$15 billion.

They include A$7.2 billion to upgrade a major highway in the state of Queensland, A$3 billion for upgrades to the country’s broadband network and A$2 billion to support the aluminium industry.

(With inputs from Reuters)