Last month Australian employment surprisingly tumbled in December, snapping four months of gains and sending the currency lower as traders boosted wagers on the Reserve Bank switching to policy easing this year. The economy had shed 65,100 roles, led by the biggest monthly drop in full-time employment since the height of pandemic, but unemployment held at 3.9%, cushioned by a sharp fall in the number of workers seeking jobs.
Now we got the next update from the ABS which showed that the economy added just 500 roles in January, confounding expectations for a 25,000 gain and well shy of numbers needed to hold down the jobless rate.
Unemployment advanced to 4.1% from 3.9% while the participation rate was steady. The number of people considered officially unemployed increased by 22,000.
“This is another sign of moderation in jobs demand,” said Diana Mousina, deputy chief economist at AMP Ltd. “I still don’t think that you can justify a near-term rate cut right now because the labor market still looks tighter than before the pandemic. It’s loosened, but not enough to get worried about.”
NAB’s Tapas Strickland noted the labour market was still tight and said the central bank would likely wait for next month’s data before drawing any firm conclusions. “If the lift in the unemployment rate is sustained, then that would suggest a softening in the labour market is occurring faster than the RBA’s track, which could give the RBA greater confidence in their forecasts of inflation heading back to the mid-point of the band,” said Mr Strickland.
But frankly, the numberwanging is all over the shop.
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