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Bullying, racism & harassment: All in a day’s work!

UQ study shows hospitality workers endure sexual harassment, bullying, wage theft and racism mainly from customers

A University of Queensland (UQ) study of hospitality workers in Australia has found the industry is rife with abuse, sexual harassment, bullying, racism, wage theft and exploitation.

Associate Professor Richard Robinson from UQ Business School surveyed almost 400 hospitality employees in late 2021 and early 2022 to understand how their working experiences aligned with the five Fairwork Principles: contracts, pay, working conditions, management and representation.

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“The results exposed deep cultural issues in the hospitality industry, with poor behaviours and practices that have become normalised and systemic,” Dr Robinson said.

“More than 60 percent of respondents experienced sexual harassment, verbal and psychological bullying or racial abuse, while more than 70 percent witnessed these behaviours.

“Customers were the main perpetrators, although 42 percent of respondents said the abuse came from their managers or supervisors.”

Pay and contracts were also significant concerns, with almost 20 percent of respondents not receiving minimum pay rates or unsure whether they were paid fairly.

Around 45 percent reported not receiving overtime or penalty rate loading entitlements, while more than 30 percent said they never saw a contract or written terms for their current job.

Dr Robinson said it was important to highlight these issues, particularly in the current tight labour market.

“With the unemployment rate at 3.4 percent, demand for workers is high but supply is low – allowing some hospitality workers to negotiate higher wages and better conditions,” he said.

“But unless all industry leaders and business owners address these cultural issues at their core, we’ll return to an imbalance of power when labour market dynamics change.”

Dr Robinson said the same survey was administered by colleagues to hospitality workers in New Zealand, Ireland, Scotland, Norway and Greece.

“The results were consistent, indicating systemic issues in hospitality worldwide,” he said, adding he hoped his findings would give exploited hospitality workers a voice.

“The general public should be aware that the people serving them in restaurants, cafes, hotels and clubs are often under immense strain – and we should cut them some slack,” he said.

The survey findings have been published in the report, Serving up a Fair Go? Serving up a Fair Go? Surfacing cultural issues in hospitality employment.

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