Steven Miller, Microsoftโs area vice president for Australia and New Zealand, said the deal had been about a year in the making. He said workers would be central to whether Australia ultimately benefited from AI, both as users of the technology and as contributors to how it evolves.
โTheyโre the ones who are going to be leveraging it. Theyโre the ones who are going to be driving adoption,โ he told this masthead. โTheyโll be a critical enabler of Australiaโs prosperity, whether thatโs creating new companies in the future or finding new ways to work better right now.โ
The deal builds on an earlier memorandum of understanding between Microsoft and several unions, including the Australian Services Union, Professionals Australia and the Shop Distributive and Allied Employees Association, which formally recognised the rights of Microsoft employees to join unions and the protections of workplace delegates.
While business leaders and governments talk up AIโs economic upside, unions have warned that poorly governed systems risk deskilling workers, entrenching surveillance and automating decisions without accountability.
Credit: iStock
ACTU assistant secretary Joseph Mitchell said the agreement responded directly to long-standing union concerns that AI was being rolled out without meaningful consultation.
โWorkers through their unions have consistently raised concerns that AI is being developed and deployed without their voices being heard,โ Mitchell said. โMicrosoftโs commitments to recognise fundamental workplace rights and engage meaningfully with unions is a first for global technology companies operating in Australia.โ
The framework also includes explicit language recognising the rights of creative and media workers, an increasingly sensitive issue as generative AI systems are trained on large volumes of text, images and audio.
The federal government has welcomed the agreement, framing it as a model for how AI could lift productivity while protecting workers. Assistant Minister for Science, Technology and the Digital Economy Andrew Charlton said it would give workers โa fair goโ, while Employment and Workplace Relations Minister Amanda Rishworth said involving workers in AI implementation was critical to ensuring the benefits were fairly shared.
Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations Amanda Rishworth.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen
โWith the right settings, AI will be a significant driver for Australiaโs economic opportunity and productivity, supporting people into secure work and creating higher-paying jobs,โ Rishworth said. โInvolving workersโ voices and utilising their expertise in the rollout of AI is a valuable part of implementation.โ
Microsoft estimates that AI could contribute up to $115 billion to Australiaโs economy by the end of the decade, and the agreement aligns with the governmentโs National AI Plan, which emphasises workforce skills but leaves much of the detail to industry.
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The framework is explicitly not legally binding, however. It commits both parties to consult in good faith if disputes arise but creates no enforceable obligations. Miller said that flexibility was deliberate.
โThe industry and the needs are moving at such a pace that something overly rigid risks becoming redundant,โ he said. โThe intent here is to partner deeply, with solid governance, while still being able to move as the technology evolves.โ
Over the coming year, Microsoft and the ACTU plan to run joint learning sessions, establish regular worker feedback mechanisms and identify priority sectors for pilot projects.