Category: Media Release

  • After two years of profit-led inflation, workers deserve the pay rises they are getting

    Originally published in The Guardian on November 16, 2023

    The wage rises for low-paid workers on awards and those working in aged care helped drive the strong wage growth.

    The latest wage growth figures showed that workers’ wages for the past six months have grown faster than inflation. As Labour Market Policy Director, Greg Jericho writes in his Guardian Australia column, this should be celebrated. We need to shed our fear of wage rises. For too long any sign of increasing wage growth has been viewed as something to be stomped on while ever-increasing corporate profits have been cheered.

    Since the start of the pandemic, workers’ purchasing power has crashed, and the only way to recover the lost real wages is through wages increasing faster than inflation.

    The 1.4% growth of private-sector wages in the September quarter was driven largely off the back of the Fair Work Commission’s decision to increase Award wages by 5.75% and the decision to give aged-care workers a 15% pay rise.

    As a result around 40% of those who gained a pay rise in the September quarter received one greater than 4%.

    One other pleasing sign has been the relaxation of public sector wage caps has allowed those workers around the country to get a fairer pay rise, but their increases remain well below that of the private-sector.

    The profit-led inflation since 2021 hurt workers, and it now is only fair that they receive some recompense. After a decade of ever falling wage growth and a pandemic and recover that smashed real wages, it is very good news that workers are finally getting their fair reward.


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    Centre For Future Work to evolve into standalone entity

    The Centre for Future Work was established by the Australia Institute in 2016 to conduct and publish progressive economic research on work, employment, and labour markets. Supported by the Australian Union movement, the centre produced cutting edge research and led the national conversation on economic issues facing working people: including the future of jobs, wages

  • The Government needs to act on Stage 3 as the RBA warns about wealthy households spending

    Originally published in The Guardian on November 9, 2023

    The RBA made it clear one group continues to do well, and continue to spend – and they are also the ones who are about to get a massive tax cut.

    The Reserve Bank’s decision to raise interest rates on Tuesday lacked any clear reasoning.

    When compared with other periods such as during the mining boom, when household spending was growing fast and real wages were surging, we can see that the economy at the moment is much weaker. Households are now cutting back on luxuries as their real wages fall.

    But the RBA pointed out that one group of Australians are doing OK – those with high income and wealth. Those with large savings buffers and who are also enjoying the increased wealth from rising house prices are still spending.

    This is also the group who are about to be handed the biggest income tax cut in history. The Reserve Bank has made it clear that allowing Stage 3 to go forward in its current form will only fuel inflation and likely result in higher interest rates for all.

    With a Reserve Bank desperate to use any excused to raise rates and slow the economy even as it already slows, the Government needs to amend the Stage 3 cuts to deliver greater benefit to low-middle income households who have suffered the most from the rising cost of living and interest rates, and less to those who are already doing well and for whom a potential $9,075 tax cut would just put more fuel on the inflation fire.


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    Centre For Future Work to evolve into standalone entity

    The Centre for Future Work was established by the Australia Institute in 2016 to conduct and publish progressive economic research on work, employment, and labour markets. Supported by the Australian Union movement, the centre produced cutting edge research and led the national conversation on economic issues facing working people: including the future of jobs, wages

  • When the prices of necessities are rising fast, the RBA does not need to hit households with another rate rise

    Originally published in The Guardian on November 2, 2023

    Cost of living rose by more than inflation because of interest rate rises. Another rate rise would only cause more unnecessary pain.

    In the past week, the likelihood of the Reserve Bank raising the cash rate to 4.35% has gone from about 20% prior to last week’s inflation figures coming out, to now an even-money bet.

    But when you look at the cost of living figures out this week it is clear that households are already having to reduce their spending on non-discretionary items.

    Out of the 14 biggest contributors to inflation, 10 were non-discretionary items.

    At this point we should note the comments of the secretary of the Treasury, Steven Kennedy, last week in Senate estimates. He was asked about the pathway to a “soft landing” – ie where inflation falls without us going into a recession.

    He noted that chances of a soft landing were made harder by recent rises in oil prices because “on the one hand, it will increase headline inflation by raising petrol prices. On the other hand, it may well reduce growth and see other prices fall because people have less to spend. At least in the short term, expenditure on petrol is not very discretionary.”

    When the prices of things you can’t avoid paying for rise faster than others, then that obviously reduces your ability to spend elsewhere. In this way petrol, electricity and rental price rises have the same impact as do interest rate rises.

    The most recent figures of the volume of retail spending will come out tomorrow, but we know that the volume has been falling, and is now back to pre-pandemic trend levels:

    This of course is what you would expect – when the cost of non-retail items such as petrol, mortgages, rents, electricity, property rates, medical services and insurance are rising, you are going to buy less in the shops.

    Since March last year the cost of mortgages has gone up 114%. Does the Reserve Bank think households haven’t really noticed that?

    Even you if discount the record low rates during the pandemic, the cost of mortgages is now about 70% higher than it was at the end of 2019. Since then, wages have risen only about 10.5%.

    Another rate rise is not going to do anything other than add to the cost of necessities. It would not so much reduce inflation as increase the cost of living and hit households whose wages and incomes continue to be worth less than they were a year ago.


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  • The Reserve Bank should not raise rates on Melbourne Cup Day

    Originally published in The Guardian on October 26, 2023

    Inflation is being driven by things unaffected by interest rate, so there is no reason for the RBA to raise rates in November

    The latest CPI figures showed inflation grew 5.4%, down from 6% in the June quarter and almost a third below the peak of 7.8% at the end of last year. And yet commentators seem desperate for the Reserve Bank of Australia to raise interest rates next month to show it is tough on inflation. But raising rates now would not be tough, it would just be cruel.

    The annual growth of inflation is falling quite quickly – down from 7.8% at the end of last year. But because the quarterly growth of inflation rose in the September quarter, a numbe rof commentators and economists have been suggesting that the Reserve Bank should raise interest rates in two months.

    But when you examine the drivers of inflation in the September quarter, there is little that would have an impact from higher interest rates.

    Automotive fuel prices accounted for 20% of the growth in inflation in September – that is completely unaffected by rate rises given that it was all due to higher world oil prices due to OPECD restricting supply. Similarly rental prices, electricity, property rates and charges, insurance, tobacco and beer prices have nothing to do with interest rates. Even the cost of building a new home is driven mostly by the increased cost of construction materials from overseas.

    Crucially in the September quarter the cost of “non-discretionary item” rose 1.4% while the cost of “discretionary” item rose just 0.7%. Non-discretionary items are things which you cannot avoid paying (at least in the short-term). In effect those price rises have the same impact on consumer spending as do rate rises – they reduce the ability of people to spend money on things in shops and on discretionary services.

    Had the RBA raised interest rates more in the September quarter there would have been negligible impact on the main drivers of inflation, raising them in November due to these latest figures would just be cruel and hurting people whose real wages continue to fall.


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  • Australia is an energy super power, we need to use that power for good

    Originally published in The Guardian on October 19, 2023

    Australia is already an energy superpower, but our governments have lacked the courage to use that power to reduce greenhouse gas emissions

    As the Australian Government continues to pursue policies notionally designed to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, a great store has been placed in Australia becoming a “renewable energy superpower”. However as Labour Market and Fiscal Policy Director, Greg Jericho, notes in his Guardian Australia column, Australia already is an energy superpower. But we fail to use that power for good.

    Australia is either the world’s largest or second-largest exporter of metallurgical coal, thermal coal and LNG. And yet we have not sought to use this power to pursue policies that would reduce demand for fossil fuels and transition the world towards renewable energy. Instead, we placate mining companies and give no timeline to end coal and gas use. We continue to approve new coal mines and fail to insert a climate-change trigger into environment protection legislation that determines whether new mines can be approved.

    Given September this year was the hottest September on record, after August this year being the hottest August on record, July this year being the hottest July on record and June this year being the hottest June on record, the time for action that reduces Australia’s and the world’s emissions is urgent and critical.

    Climate change is one area where Australia can legitimately take a leading role in global affairs, our power as an energy producer and supplier of fossil fuels which continue to exacerbate climate change demands we show this leadership.

    For too long Australian governments have cowered before mining companies, now it’s the time to realise we have the minerals they want now and in the future when renewable energy becomes the dominant power and thus we can dictate terms.

    Leadership requires the grasping of power and using it for good.


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    Dutton’s nuclear push will cost renewable jobs

    by Charlie Joyce

    Dutton’s nuclear push will cost renewable jobs As Australia’s federal election campaign has finally begun, opposition leader Peter Dutton’s proposal to spend hundreds of billions in public money to build seven nuclear power plants across the country has been carefully scrutinized. The technological unfeasibility, staggering cost, and scant detail of the Coalition’s nuclear proposal have

    Australia’s Gas Use On The Slide

    by Ketan Joshi

    The Federal Government has released a new report that includes projections of how much gas Australia is set to use over the coming decades. There is no ambiguity in its message: Australia reached peak gas years ago, and it’s all downhill from here:

  • The latest report from the IMF highlights the need for full-employment to be the aim of the government and the Reserve Bank

    Originally published in The Guardian on October 12, 2023

    If the economy grows as slowly as the IMF predicts it will for the next 2 years, Australia will be lucky to avoid a recession.

    The IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook is mostly framed around trying to thread the needle of reducing inflation and cost of living rises and not crashing the economy while doing so.

    And while overall the IMF suggests the world economy is in for a “soft landing” the picture it paints for Australia is of a tough year ahead. Policy director Greg Jericho notes in his Guardian Australia column that the IMF has downgraded its expectation for growth next year from an already bad 1.7% to a historically awful 1.2%.

    Were Australia’s economy to grow this slowly through the year and avoid a recession it would be the first time that has happened. The IMF also predicts that 2025 will grow by just 2.0%. Were that to occur, it would be the first time on record that Australia’s economy has gone 3 consecutive calendar years without growth above 2%. That is hardly a “soft landing”

    The IMF also now predict unemployment will rise quicker than it expected would be the case in its previous outlook in April.

    The report highlights the need for the government and the Reserve Bank to work to deliver full employment. The current settings have the nation on course to grow so slowly for so long that the risk of the economy stalling are rising precipitously.


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  • Insecure work is a feature of our labour market. New laws can change that.

    Insecure work is a feature of our labour market. New laws can change that.

    by Chris Wright

    Chris Wright is Associate Professor in the Discipline of Work and Organisational Studies at the University of Sydney, and a member of the Centre for Future Work’s Advisory Committee. This commentary is based on his submission to the Senate Education and Employment Legislation Committee’s inquiry into the Fair Work Legislation Amendment (Closing Loopholes) Bill 2023, and originally appeared in the Sydney Morning Herald.

    *   *   *   *   *

    The Senate has started reviewing the Australian Government’s Closing Loopholes Bill. If passed, this legislation will allow minimum standards to be set for contract workers, provide stronger penalties against employers who commit wage theft and deter employers from outsourcing to circumvent enterprise bargaining.

    These measures will strengthen protections for workers who often face barriers to job security and career development.

    Australia’s current system of workplace laws was adopted at a time when enterprise bargaining and awards covered a larger share of the workforce than today. Enterprise bargaining and awards encourage employers to invest in their workers through “standard” employment arrangements underpinned by permanent contracts, decent wages and training.

    These arrangements promoting workforce investment benefit both workers and employers. Workers gain job and economic security and career progression opportunities. Employers gain loyal and satisfied workers who contribute to productivity and innovation. As the architects of the current system of workplace laws envisaged, workforce investment thus provides the basis for high-productivity business strategies, which help to make the Australian economy more internationally competitive.

    Recently, however, more businesses have opted for a different course. These businesses have tried to compete not through high-productivity strategies but instead by undercutting or evading workplace laws and by engaging workers via “non-standard” arrangements such as casual contracts or via gig economy platforms.

    The rising incidence of wage theft in which employers pay workers below their legal entitlements is evidence of this undercutting. The growing numbers of workers hired through labour hire arrangements, which some businesses have used to avoid their enterprise bargaining obligations, is evidence of evasion. So too is the emergence of gig platforms exempt from workplace laws.

    Wage theft, gig platforms and use of labour hire as an evasion tactic have become features of Australia’s modern labour market. None of these features existed when the foundations of the current system of workplace laws were first laid in the 1990s.

    As the nature of work and the labour market evolves, workplace laws must adapt in response. The Closing Loopholes Bill recognises this by allowing workers on casual contracts to convert more easily to permanent contracts, increasing protections for gig and labour hire workers and introducing new measures against employers who undercut wage laws.

    While non-standard workers have flexibility, they have little job and economic security under current laws. For instance, casual workers receive a higher hourly pay rate as compensation for this insecurity but are concentrated in the lowest-paid industries. Like their counterparts in the gig economy, casual workers are less likely to receive training than permanent workers.

    The proposed change to give casuals who work regular hours the right to convert to permanent employment will probably improve their access to good quality jobs and career development opportunities.

    Business groups have criticised the Closing Loopholes Bill for its supposedly negative impacts on productivity and innovation. They have not offered evidence supporting these claims. To the contrary, research evidence suggests that measures promoting standard employment are more likely to encourage businesses to compete through high-productivity and innovation-enhancing strategies rather than by undercutting or evading.

    Winston Churchill once said that without effective workplace laws, “the good employer is undercut by the bad and the bad by the worst… Where those conditions prevail you have not a condition of progress, but a condition of progressive degeneration”.

    Workers in Australia are increasingly missing out on legal protections under current laws. The research evidence suggests the Closing Loopholes Bill’s provisions are necessary to avoid a situation like the one Churchill described.


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  • Inflation remains headed in the right direction despite higher oil prices

    Originally published in The Guardian on September 28, 2023

    Increases in the prices of commodities like oil and gas are not a reason for the RBA to raise interest rates next week

    The latest monthly CPI figures out on Wednesday showed a slight increase in the annual growth of inflation, but policy director Greg Jericho writes in his Guardian Australia column that the Reserve Bank should not use it as an excuse to raise rates next week.

    While CPI rose from 4.9% to 5.2%, the monthly figures can be quite erratic and thus it is best to also take note of the measure that excludes volatile items and holiday travel (which can exaggerate movement son a monthly basis). On this measure, annual inflation feel from 5.8% to 5.5%.

    The big driver of inflation in August was a 9% jump in automotive fuel prices. And indeed much of the inflation over the past 2 years has come from overseas increases in world prices of commodities and of course companies taking advantage to increase profit margins.

    The latest figures show that once again there is very little that the RBA can do to limit these price rises. While a higher exchange rate might ameliorate some of the increases, it is always foolish for the RBA to attempt to increase the value of the dollar by raising interest rates. Any changes in the value of the exchange rate due to another rate rise would likely be small and temporary.

    The new Governor of the RBA, Michele Bullock should recommend the RBA board look through the monthly movements of the CPI and note that inflation here is following largely the same path as that in the rest of the OECD. Raising rates now would only serve to punish households for an increase in prices that had no link with wages or the level of demand in Australia economy.


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  • Opening statement to the ACTU Price Gouging Inquiry

    Opening statement to the ACTU Price Gouging Inquiry

    by Jim Stanford and Greg Jericho

    This week Professor Allan Fels, the former head of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), has begun an inquiry into price gouging across a range of industries, including banks, insurance companies, supermarkets, and energy providers. The inquiry commissioned by the ACTU comes off the back of the highest inflation in 30 years and the biggest falls in real wages on record.

    The Director of the Centre for Future Work, Jim Stanford and policy director and chief economist of the Australia Institute, Greg Jericho, presented evidence at the inquiry based on their research into profit-led inflation. Below is an edited excerpt of their opening statement.

    The recent period of rising inflation has been highly unusual coming as it has after a period where in Australia, core inflation by June 2021 had not been above the Reserve Bank’s target range of 2% to 3% for more than a decade and had been below 2% for five and half years.

    Perhaps unsurprisingly, because of such a long period without rising inflation, we saw very much a default to the thinking of the 1970s and a belief that all inflation is primarily driven by demand factors that need to be limited by higher interest rates.

    This was a fundamental misunderstanding of this inflationary period. It clearly could not be driven by wages because wages at all stages over the past two years have grown on average by less than inflation, such that real wages are now 5.5% below what they were two years ago.

    Wage growth in the 12 months to June this year was just 3.6%, still well below the CPI of 6%, and far from accelerating, actually had fallen from 3.7% growth in the 12 months to March.

    Thus, the question becomes, if not wages, what?

    Our research in February this year revealed that the initial surge of inflation in Australia beginning in mid-2021 was closely associated with a surge in price pressures.

    Business profits were the dominant manifestation of that inflation. The supply shocks that occurred because of the pandemic lockdowns and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine allowed companies in some key industries (such as energy, logistics, and manufacturing) to significantly boost their profit margins, coincident with rising prices.

    Our February 2023 paper, using the decomposition method of the national accounts (as explained by Jim), concluded that since the end of 2019, 69% of unit price increases over and above the RBA’s 2.5% inflation target mid-point were attributable to increased nominal unit profit payments. Only 18% was attributable to higher nominal unit labour costs, and the rest to increases in other nominal factor payments.

    Our paper noted that the profit growth was most dramatic in the energy and resources sector. These findings were broadly consistent with the findings of earlier research by the Australia Institute, as well as with the similar decompositions of inflation reported in other countries.

    Our follow-up report in April confirmed the leading role played by profits in the energy and resource industries. It noted that products from that sector (including petrol, gas, and other fossil fuel-intensive products) were leading sources of domestic inflation in Australia. It also showed that profits in other sectors, such as wholesale trade (56%), manufacturing (38%), professional and technological services (37%) and construction (37%), had also increased as a share of non-mining GDP since the pandemic. This profit growth is not dissimilar from the 48% growth in mining profits during the same period and well in excess of the 27% increase in nominal GDP.

    This confirmed that firms across these sectors have more than simply passed on higher input costs to consumers. As American economist Isabelle Weber has argued, they amplified them.

    The release of two more quarters of national accounts since February allows us to update our figures, which find that despite recent falls in corporate profits in some sectors, higher unit profit payouts still account for over half (56%) of the cumulative increase in nominal unit prices in the Australian economy since December 2019, above and beyond what would be expected due to normal target inflation. The role of higher unit labour costs in overall unit prices has increased in recent quarters and now accounts for just over one-third (35%) of the cumulative above-target rise in prices since the pandemic.

    The influence of profits is clear when you consider that unit profit costs by June 2023 were 27% above their December 2019 levels (down from 37% above in March 2023), while unit labour costs are just 14% above December 2019 levels – pointedly just below the 15% growth in CPI.

    There have been some suggestions by the Reserve Bank and others that our research should exclude mining profits as these do not significantly influence Australian inflation. Profits in mining during this time accounted for over half of all corporate profits in Australia; obviously, if over half of corporate profits are excluded from consideration, then profits will obviously seem less important.

    We reject the argument that mining profits somehow “don’t count” – especially in regard to domestic inflation, given the critical role played by higher petrol, gas, and electricity prices in driving the initial post-pandemic surge in Australian consumer price inflation.

    Clearly, there is a strong connection between energy prices, energy industry profits, and inflation experienced by domestic consumers (not to mention inflation experienced in other sectors of the economy).

    The good news is that corporate profits have begun to moderate in the first half of this year. It is important to note the modest decline in gross operating surplus in some sectors has still left corporate profits as a share of national GDP well above pre-pandemic levels and far above longer-term post-war averages.

    Nevertheless, even the partial moderation of record corporate profits has been associated with a significant and welcome deceleration of inflation. Consumer price inflation in Australia has slowed by over half in the last nine months: from an annualised peak of 8.9% in the first quarter of 2022 (led by surging energy costs) to just 3.4% in the June quarter of 2023 (not much higher than the top of the RBA’s target range).

    Moreover, even in the later stages of this current inflation cycle, with profits stable or even falling and labour costs accelerating, it’s wrong to conclude that labour is now the ‘source’ of inflation: clearly, the rise in unit labour costs reflects efforts by workers to recoup real income losses experienced earlier in the inflationary cycle, which must still be ascribed to the initial profit-led shocks that started the whole process.

    Blaming workers now for inflation because they are pursuing higher wages to recover lost living standards is like blaming a homeowner whose house has been set on fire for using too much water to put out the flames.

    Even as it appears to be moderating, this period of inflation requires a rethink of our policy approaches.

    We have made a number of policy recommendations, including:

    • Price regulations in strategic sectors
    • Fiscal transfers (such as windfall profits taxes combined with cost-of-living transfers to vulnerable households)
    • Competition policy reforms
    • Supports for wage increases in excess of current inflation for a sustained period of time to allow the repair of recent real wage reductions.

    The biggest lesson from this period is that we need more policy tools in our inflation toolkit. Relying on monetary policy and higher interest rates only works if you think inflation is only ever produced by higher wages and strong aggregate demand.

    We know that the future is more likely than not to feature further global shocks – not the least from climate change. Policymakers and central banks need to learn from the past two years and ready themselves to treat the broader causes of inflation and protect workers and households when companies seek to use crises as an opportunity to lift prices.


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    Centre For Future Work to evolve into standalone entity

    The Centre for Future Work was established by the Australia Institute in 2016 to conduct and publish progressive economic research on work, employment, and labour markets. Supported by the Australian Union movement, the centre produced cutting edge research and led the national conversation on economic issues facing working people: including the future of jobs, wages

  • Deteriorating Disability Worker Pay, Conditions Undermining NDIS

    Deteriorating Disability Worker Pay, Conditions Undermining NDIS

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    An urgent overhaul of poorly paid and casualised disability support work is needed to ensure the National Disability Insurance Scheme’s viability and protect participants from substandard care, a new report by the Australia Institute’s Centre for Future Work says.

    Going backwards: How NDIS workforce arrangements are undermining decent work and gender equality warns deteriorating conditions for the quarter of a million workers supporting the scheme – which is increasingly reliant on digital platforms, third-party intermediaries and independent contractors – risk undermining its long-term survival.

    The Centre for Future Work’s report calls for comprehensive reforms to protect NDIS workers, 40% of which are casuals. Bolstering NDIS working standards would also make the scheme work more effectively for participants – and taxpayers – through reduced wastage and increased accountability.

    Key reforms:

    • Mandatory requirements within NDIS pricing arrangements to lift minimum pay for all NDIS-funded disability support workers under the Social and Community Services Award
    • Establishing a national mandatory worker registration and accreditation scheme for disability support workers
    • Requiring all NDIS providers to be registered, with registration requirements proportionate to the risks of service provision
    • Ensuring all NDIS support workers have access to adequate supervision and support, secure work and employment entitlements, and to collective representation and bargaining
    • Establishing portable leave and training for disability support workers
    • Reviewing funding and pricing so workers can collectively bargain for over-award wages

    “The NDIS is a major employer and a huge source of indirect jobs. But despite its size and importance to society and the economy, unfulfilled promises for workers – predominantly women – around fair pay, decent working conditions and career opportunities risk jeopardising the scheme’s sustainability,” said Dr Fiona Macdonald, Policy Director, Industrial and Social at the Centre for Future Work.

    “Limited regulatory oversight of the NDIS has eroded fair pay and working conditions. This has resulted in an overreliance on casuals, who make up a staggering 40% of workers supporting the scheme, and endure fragmented hours and poor pay relative to the demands and risks of the job.

    “Undercutting their pay and conditions does not just deter potential workers from joining the sector, it compromises the quality of support provided to vulnerable NDIS participants.”

    “Policy responses to date, including the National Care and Support Economy Strategy and the independent NDIS Review, are welcome. But the fixes proposed so far are fragmented and not enough to ensure the scheme is effective and sustainable, protecting jobs and people with disabilities.

    “The NDIS has great potential to do more for the people accessing and working for it, but only if we face up to the real problems that risk undermining its purpose.

    “Ensuring decent jobs within the NDIS is not just about economic sustainability; it’s about achieving societal equity and fulfilling the promises of quality employment and support made a decade ago.”


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