The Department of Labour was an Australian government department that existed between December 1972 and June 1974.[3] This department was created and operated under the Whitlam government, with Clyde Cameron appointed as minister. The Department of Labour was a catalyst for the increase in the national minimum wage and pushed for the equalising of pay rates between men and women.[4][5] During this period, Cameron pushed for paid maternity and annual leave.[6][7] They also worked to reduce the number of industrial disputes for the Conciliation and Arbitration Commission.[8] Many attribute the department's employment of wage indexation policies as a contributing factor to the 1975 economic recession.[9][10]
The Department was one of several new Departments established by the Whitlam government, a wide restructuring that revealed some of the new government's reforms.[11]