Multimillionaire Tim Gurner regrets ‘deeply insensitive’ comments calling for ‘pain in the economy’

Property developer and Gurner Group CEO says suggestion unemployment should increase by 40% to 50% to create more productive workers was ‘wrong’

The Australian multimillionaire Tim Gurner has apologised for the controversial comments he made at a property summit on Tuesday, saying he deeply regrets his remarks and they “were wrong”.

On Tuesday, Gurner, who is a property developer and founder of the Gurner Group, drew fierce backlash after he suggested at the event held by the Australian Financial Review that unemployment should increase by 40% to 50% to create more productive workers.

“At the AFR Property Summit this week I made some remarks about unemployment and productivity in Australia that I deeply regret and were wrong,” Gurner said in a statement released on Thursday.

“There are clearly important conversations to have in this environment of high inflation, pricing pressures on housing and rentals due to a lack of supply, and other cost-of-living issues,” he added.

“My comments were deeply insensitive to employees, tradies and families across Australia who are affected by these cost-of-living pressures and job losses.”

During Gurner’s appearance at the property summit on Tuesday, where he said “we need to see pain in the economy”, he took aim at tradies.

“Tradies have definitely pulled back on productivity. You know, they have been paid a lot to do not too much in the last few years, and we need to see that change,” he said.

However, Gurner, whose company holds a portfolio reportedly worth more than $9.5bn (US$6.09bn), also imparted advice to make Australia’s broader workforce more productive.

“We need to remind people that they work for the employer, not the other way around,” he said.

“There’s been a systematic change where employees feel the employer is extremely lucky to have them as opposed to the other way around. So it’s a dynamic that has to change. We’ve got to kill that attitude and that has to come through hurting the economy.

“We need to see unemployment rise, unemployment has to jump 40, 50%.”

In his statement apologising for the remarks, Gurner said: “I want to be clear: I do appreciate that when someone loses their job it has a profound impact on them and their families and I sincerely regret that my words did not convey empathy for those in that situation.”

Gurner’s comments were quick to be condemned, and even drew fierce reaction from the US Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

“Reminder that major CEOs have skyrocketed their own pay so much that the ratio of CEO-to-worker pay is now at some of the highest levels *ever* recorded,” Ocasio-Cortez wrote on Twitter/X, after a video of Gurner’s comments were circulated online.

The Labor MP Jerome Laxale wrote the comments were what you would “associate with a cartoon supervillain, not the CEO of a company in 2023”.

“Mr Gurner should spend more time running his company, instead of using a public forum to regurgitate his dastardly economic theories,” Laxale wrote.

Contributor

Jordyn Beazley

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Australia’s unemployment rate remains at 3.4% in November as 64,000 new jobs added
National jobless rate remains at near 50-year low as rebounding economy faces labor shortages from lack of migration

Peter Hannam Economics correspondent

15, Dec, 2022 @12:59 AM

Article image
Australia’s unemployment rate unexpectedly drops from 4.1% to 3.7% in February despite slowing economy
Latest ABS figures show the labour market added 116,000 jobs defying signs of weakness since September

Peter Hannam and Luca Ittimani

21, Mar, 2024 @12:34 AM

Article image
Australia’s unemployment rate climbs to 3.7% in January, higher than economists expected
Succession of interest rate rises by the RBA trims jobs growth as unemployment jumps to its highest level since May 2022

Peter Hannam Economics correspondent

16, Feb, 2023 @4:01 AM

Article image
Occupations facing skills shortages in Australia almost doubled in past year
Of the 20 largest employing occupations, more than half are having difficulties finding workers

Sarah Martin Chief political correspondent

05, Oct, 2022 @4:30 PM

Article image
Australia’s unemployment rate rises to 3.8% in March as employers shed more than 6,000 jobs
Reserve Bank and Treasury had predicted unemployment rate would rise from February’s 3.7% as interest rates bite

Peter Hannam

18, Apr, 2024 @4:23 AM

Article image
David Pocock to give crucial support to IR bill after deal on jobseeker and welfare
Agreement struck with key independent boosts safeguards for small and medium businesses

Paul Karp

27, Nov, 2022 @12:28 AM

Article image
Renters and families to be hit hardest by new gas price rises, advocates warn
Consumer Policy Research Centre survey reveals 11% of Victorians asked for payment assistance from energy provider

Stephanie Convery Inequality reporter

02, Feb, 2023 @5:26 AM

Article image
Jim Chalmers confident Australia will avoid recession despite warnings of more interest rate rises
The treasurer also noted ‘very encouraging’ signs on power prices falling, saying Labor’s energy price relief package was working

Amy Remeikis

12, Feb, 2023 @3:34 AM

Article image
Australia’s inflation rate eased to 4.9% in July, down from 5.4% in June
Larger than expected fall reduces likelihood Reserve Bank of Australia will raise interest rates again

Peter Hannam

30, Aug, 2023 @2:38 AM

Article image
Cost-of-living crisis: Albanese government launches taskforce to review competition in bid to ease pressures
Panel’s appointment comes as Woolworths reports rise in net annual earnings to $1.6bn, a day after Coles posts $1.1bn profit

Peter Hannam

23, Aug, 2023 @5:58 AM