Tampilkan postingan dengan label rate. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label rate. Tampilkan semua postingan

Senin, 30 Agustus 2010

Microsoft Is Being Greedy by Charging Charities

Use Microsoft and pay an arm and a leg - well maybe not quite. Schools using Microsoft software have always enjoyed a discount on the number of copies they use for teaching purposes. Until recently charities also used the Academic Open licence. Microsoft got tough on them and shut them out of the cheap licencing system. An Australian charity negotiated with Microsoft and got a good deal paying only 40 percent of the full rate. Seventeen charities now enjoy this benefit.

It pays to negotiate individually. Anglicare Tasmania got an even larger discount. So much pressure was brought to bear that other charities were allowed back onto the new Charity Open licence which is very cheap indeed. Microsoft is still playing a waiting game keeping charities that do not make a challenge on the full enterprise rate.

Let's face it. Microsoft is too greedy. It has the market to itself and governments need to legislate to override international trading laws. It is a monopoly and should be controlled accordingly. Before discounting Microsoft demands $150,000 up front. this is a strong arm tactic. Some countries protect consumers from finance company demands when they cannot pay a loan on time. There should be similar protection laws from Microsoft. Some charities are moving to Red Hat software. They shouldn't have to do this.
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Minggu, 11 Juli 2010

The Labor Government Should Regulate to Reduce Casual Contracts

Why doesn't Labor really help workers? The present government brought in a new employment system but it still allows companies to employ people on a casual basis. This pillar of John Howard's Work Choices continues. While employers can retain the services of people casually unions have no power to protect them. A recent example is a person employed permanently by Coles. The manager told the worker he was stupid and tried to press him into leaving voluntarily. When the downcast worker refused he was put on a casual contract and the hours offered per week diminished to such a low level that he had to find work elsewhere to feed himself.

Casual employees are supposed to be paid a higher hourly rate to cover annual leave, bank holidays and paid sick days, yet there are no clear laws setting such rates. The contract is really a bond for employers to "use" cheap labor. It ties the worker, not the employer.

Those working in shops are largely on casual contracts, 44 per cent. If laws gave them the choice these workers would jump at secure employment. Companies benefit financially from this system. The amount of labor required to meet market demand can be controlled absolutely. As demand falls so hours offered for work is reduced. This is heaven for companies with a tight profit margin such as retail. Companies say they would pay for holidays and sick leave if they could. This is an admission that they "do not" pay.
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Sabtu, 29 Mei 2010

Australian House Prices Will Remain High

An IMF spokesman has a crystal ball and says house prices will crash in Australia. Me-thinks he is completely wrong. He says this will happen because houses in Australia are overvalued in relation to income with a large gap between rent and house values.

ANZ representative Paul Braddick says that low rents to average mortgage repayments is not an indication that property is overvalued. House price to income is also not a good guide to what house prices should be. Australians are still buying despite interest rate rises, but interest is still quite low. Obviously people feel their income can cover the cost. Prices are high in Australia due to one very important factor - property is in short supply. Nothing can be done in the short term to correct this. Indeed, tradesmen are holding buyers to ransom making them wait and pushing up labor charges. These factors also increase price.

The availability of land close to centers of employment is tight and supply is virtually fixed. The government is looking to free up land. Not much is out there though. IMF specialists have got it wrong in predicting a slump in Australian house prices. That's a certainty.
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