Australian employment surpassed expectations in June and the jobless rate held at a lower revised rate, underlining the labor market’s resilience to rapid interest-rate increases.
The jobless rate remained at 3.5%, having hovered in a range of 3.4%-3.7% since June last year, Australian Bureau of Statistics data showed Thursday. The economy added 32,600 roles from a month prior, more than double estimates, and employment has now risen in nine out of the past 12 months.
The data increases pressure on the Reserve Bank to resume raising rates, with money market bets implying a better-than 50% chance of a hike to 4.35% at its Aug. 1 meeting. The Australian dollar extended earlier gains, rising to 68.25 US cents. Three-year bond yields jumped 12 basis points, heading for their largest one-day increase since July 7.
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The ABS released the latest employment figures today. Media coverage amped up the “weakness” in the numbers – but most is due to external factors such as sample changes, seasonality and high rates of illness. This was a classic case of numberwang again. http://www.martinnorth.com/ Go to the Walk The World Universe at https://walktheworld.com.au/
The ABS data today was a bit of a shock, compared with expectations, as the data indicated a slowing of the employment market. Some of this could be just a Numberwang though.
The ABS released their latest data on the labour market today, and it was not quite what was expected by the markets. In fact the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate rose to 3.5 per cent in August 2022, according to the ABS. The key reason for the rise in unemployment was the 0.2% lift in the labour force participation rate to 66.6%. The participation rate now sits just below the record high 66.8% recorded in June. Today’s post is brought to you by Ribbon Property Consultants. If you are buying your home in Sydney’s contentious market, you do not need to stand alone. This is the time you need to have Edwin from Ribbon Property Consultants standing along side you. Buying property, is both challenging and adversarial. The vendor has a professional on their side. Emotions run high – price discovery and price transparency are hard to find – then there is the wasted time and financial investment you make. Edwin understands your needs. So why not engage a licensed professional to stand alongside you. With RPC you know you have: experience, knowledge, and master negotiators, looking after your best interest. Shoot Ribbon an email on info@ribbonproperty.com.au & use promo code: DFA-WTW/MARTIN to receive your 10% DISCOUNT OFFER.
We had new data from the ABS today on employment and wages growth, the latter so far off what the RBA was projecting and to nearly be funny. But the trends are telling a very different story. Tell me again why we really need to lift inward migration?
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We look at the latest ABS data as unemployment hits the lowest since 1974. That said, hours worked fell, despite the growth in jobs, and more were on the bench because of illness.
Question now is whether higher wages growth will follow.
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We examine the latest ABS employment data for September 2021. The story is not straight forward, as many people have simply fallen out of the system and are not on the unemployment radar. The true number is closer to 8%.
RBA Governor Philip Lowe spoke at CEDA today. He signals more rate cuts, their potential limited impact and the need for other strategies to move towards higher levels of employment. Underemployment makes an entrance – finally! We have been talking about this for years.
Today, I would like to explain why this is so and also
discuss how we assess the amount of spare capacity in the labour market. I will then finish
with some comments on monetary policy.
The Broad Policy Framework
Students of central bank history would be aware that the Reserve Bank Act was
passed by the Australian Parliament in 1959 – 60 years ago. In terms of monetary
policy, the Parliament set three broad objectives for the Reserve Bank Board. It required
the Board to set monetary policy so as to best contribute to:
The stability of the currency
The maintenance of full employment
The economic prosperity and welfare of the people of Australia
These objectives have remained unchanged since 1959. Here, in Australia, we did not follow
the fashion in some other parts of the world over recent decades of setting just a single
goal for the central bank – that is, inflation control. In my view it was very
sensible not to follow this fashion. Our legislated objectives – having three
elements – are broader than those of many other central banks. The third of our three
objectives serves as a constant reminder that the ultimate objective of our policies is the
collective welfare of the Australian people.
From an operational perspective, though, the flexible inflation target is the centre piece of
our monetary policy framework. The target – which has been agreed to with successive
governments – is to deliver an average rate of inflation over time of 2–3 per cent.
Our focus is on the average and on the medium term.
Inflation averaging 2 point something constitutes a reasonable definition of price
stability. Achieving this stability helps us with our other objectives. Low and stable
inflation is a precondition to the attainment of full employment and it promotes our
collective welfare. As I have said on other occasions, we are not targeting inflation
because we are inflation nutters. Rather, we are doing so because delivering low and stable
inflation is the most effective way for Australia’s central bank to promote our
collective welfare.
So where does the labour market fit into all this?
The answer is that it is central to all three objectives.
The connection with the second objective – full employment – is obvious. The RBA
is seeking to achieve the lowest rate of unemployment that can be sustained without
inflation becoming an issue. In doing this, one of the questions we face is what constitutes
full employment in a modern economy where work arrangements are much more flexible than they
were in the past. I will return to this issue in a moment.
The labour market is, of course, also central to the third objective in our mandate –
our collective welfare. It is stating the obvious to say that for many Australians, having a
good job at a decent rate of pay is central to their economic prosperity.
Trends in the labour market also have a major bearing on inflation outcomes, so they are
important for the first element of our mandate as well. Over time, there is a close link
between wages growth and inflation. And a critical influence on wage outcomes is the balance
between supply and demand in the labour market; or in other words how much spare capacity is
there in the labour market? This question is closely linked to the one about what
constitutes full employment.
So, it is natural that we focus on the labour market as the Board makes its monthly decisions
about interest rates.
Spare Capacity
With that background I would now like to discuss how we assess the degree of spare capacity
in the Australian labour market. I will do this from four perspectives:
The rates of unemployment and underemployment
The flexibility of labour supply
The effectiveness with which people are matched with job vacancies
Trends in wages growth.
Unemployment and underemployment
The conventional measure of spare capacity in the labour market is the gap between the actual
unemployment rate and the unemployment rate associated with full employment. Even at full
employment, some level of unemployment is to be expected as workers leave jobs and search
for new ones. As my colleague Luci Ellis discussed last week, we don’t directly observe
the unemployment rate associated with full employment – we need to estimate it.[1] Over recent
times there has been a gradual accumulation of evidence which has led to lower estimates.
While it is not possible to pin the number down exactly, the evidence is consistent with an
estimate below 5 per cent, perhaps around 4½ per cent. Given that
the current unemployment rate is 5.2 per cent, this suggests that there is still
spare capacity in our labour market.
The fact that the conventional estimate of spare capacity is based on the unemployment rate
reflects an implicit assumption that if you have a job you are pretty much fully employed.
In decades past, this might have been a reasonable assumption. But it is not a realistic
assumption in today’s modern flexible labour market.
As more people work part time, it has become increasingly common to be both employed and to
work fewer hours than you want to work. In the 1960s, less than one in ten workers worked
part time (Graph 1). Today, one in three of us works part time. Almost one in two women
work part time and more than one in two younger workers work part time.
A few more facts are perhaps helpful here. According to the ABS, around 3 million people
work part time because they want to, not because they can’t find a full-time job. Most
people who are working part time do so because they are studying or have caring
responsibilities, or for other personal reasons. So we should not think of part-time jobs as
being bad jobs, and full-time jobs as being good jobs. Rather, one
of the success stories of the Australian labour market is that we have been able to
accommodate this desire for part-time work and flexibility.
Having said that, around one-quarter of people working part time are not satisfied with the
hours they are offered and would like to work more hours: we can think of these people as
underemployed (Graph 2). The share of part-time workers who are underemployed moves up
and down from year to year, and the current share is above its average level over the past
two decades.
As part of the ABS’s monthly survey of 50,000 people, it asks underemployed workers how
many extra hours they would like to work. On average, they answer that they would like to
work an extra 14 hours per week. It is interesting that this figure has trended down over
the past two decades; it used to be more than 16 hours. Over the same period, the
average hours worked by part-time workers has increased by around 2 hours to 17 hours per
week. Taken together, these data suggest that businesses are doing a better job of providing
the hours that part-time workers are seeking.
This shift to part-time work means that in assessing spare capacity we need to consider
measures of underemployment as well as measures of unemployment. The RBA has
been doing this for some time. As part of our efforts here, we have constructed a measure of
underutilisation that takes account of the part-time workers who want to work more hours.
This measure adds the extra hours sought by these workers to the hours sought by those who
are unemployed (Graph 3).[2]
These extra hours are equivalent to around 3.3 per cent of the labour force,
which, taking account of conventional unemployment, means that the underutilisation rate is
8.1 per cent. This hours-based measure is preferable to heads-based measures of
underutilisation that treats an unemployed person in the same way as a part-time worker
seeking a few more hours.
Unlike the unemployment rate, which has trended down over the past 20 years, the
underemployment rate has been relatively stable. These different patterns in unemployment
and underemployment suggest that fewer inroads have been made into spare capacity in the
labour market than suggested by looking at the unemployment rate alone. This is something we
take into account in thinking about monetary policy.
There is, though, one other perspective on the measure of underemployment that I would like
to share with you. In the past, when part-time work was not as readily available, many
people – mostly women – faced the choice of taking full-time paid employment or
no paid employment at all. Many chose to, or had to stay outside the labour force because
working was not a realistic option. From the perspective of society as a whole, this was a
serious form of underutilisation – it just wasn’t measured as such by the ABS.
Given the trend towards part-time and more flexible jobs, people have more options than they
had before and many have chosen to join, or have deferred leaving, the labour force.[3] From the
perspective of adding to the productive capacity of the nation, this is a good outcome and
if there was a measure of underutilisation that took account of exclusion from the
workforce, it would surely have declined. I don’t want to downplay the issue of
underemployment, but it is worth recognising this broader perspective, and remembering where
we have come from.
Flexibility of the supply side
This naturally brings me to my second window into spare capacity in the labour market –
the flexibility of labour supply.
Over the past 2½ years, the working-age population has increased at an annual rate of
around 1¾ per cent. Over that same time period, employment has increased at
an average rate of 2¾ per cent. The fact that employment has been increasing
considerably faster than the working-age population has led to a reduction in the
unemployment rate, but the reduction is not as large as might have been expected. The reason
for this is that the supply of labour has increased in response to the stronger demand for
workers.
This flexibility in labour supply is evident in the substantial rise in labour force
participation. The participation rate currently stands at 66 per cent, which is
the highest on record (Graph 4). Reflecting this, the share of the working-age
population in Australia with a job is currently around the record high it reached at the
peak of the resources boom. As I discussed a few moments ago, the availability of part-time
and flexible working arrangements is one reason for this.
There are two groups for which the rise in participation has been particularly pronounced:
women and older Australians (Graph 5). The female participation rate now stands at 61 per cent,
up from 43 per cent in 1979. Australia’s female participation rate is now
above the OECD average, although it remains below that of a number of countries, including
Canada and the Netherlands.
The participation rate of older workers has also increased over recent decades as health
outcomes have improved and changes have been made to retirement policies. The eligibility
age for the pension was progressively raised from 60 to 65 for females and is now being
gradually increased to 67 for everybody by 2023. The preservation age at which individuals
can access their superannuation is also being gradually increased. These changes are
contributing to higher participation by older Australians.
Another source of potential labour supply is net overseas migration. Migration, including
temporary skilled workers, increased sharply during the resources boom when demand for
skilled labour was very strong, and has subsequently declined (Graph 6). While migrants
add to both demand and supply in the economy, they can be a particularly important source of
capacity for resolving pinch-points where skill shortages exist.
A related source of flexibility stems from our unique relationship with New Zealand. When
labour demand is relatively strong in Australia, there tends to be an increase in the net
inflow of workers from New Zealand to Australia. When conditions are relatively subdued
here, the reverse occurs. During the resources boom, the inflow from across the Tasman were
as large as the inflow of temporary skilled workers.
The overall picture here is one of a flexible supply side of the labour market. When the
demand for labour is strong, more people enter the jobs market or delay leaving. This rise
in participation is a positive development. But it is one of the factors that has meant that
strong demand for labour has not put much upward pressure on wages.
The matching of people with jobs
A third perspective on spare capacity in the labour market can be gained from examining how
well people looking for jobs are matched with the jobs that are available. Looking at the
labour market from this perspective, things look a little tighter than suggested by the
other two perspectives that I have discussed.
Currently, almost 60 per cent of firms report that the availability of labour is
either a minor or a major constraint on their business (Graph 7). This share is not as
high as it was during the resources boom, but it is still quite high. Reports from the RBA’s
liaison program suggest that there are currently shortages of certain types of engineers,
workers with specialised IT skills and some tradespeople associated with public
infrastructure work. Businesses in regional areas are also more likely to report a greater
degree of difficulty finding suitable labour.
One contributing factor here is an underinvestment in staff training. In the shadow of the
global financial crisis many firms cut back training to reduce costs. We are now seeing some
evidence of the adverse longer-term implications of this. As the labour market tightens
further, I would hope that more firms are prepared to hire workers and provide the necessary
training.
Another lens on job matching is the ratio of the number of unemployed people to the number of
job vacancies (Graph 8). At present, there are fewer than three unemployed people for
each vacancy. This compares with over 20 people for every vacancy in the early 1990s
recession and five people for every vacancy in 2014. From this perspective the labour market
looks reasonably tight. There is also some tentative evidence that, on average, unemployed
workers are not as well matched to job vacancies as was the case in 2007, when the ratio of
the two was at a similar level.
One such piece of evidence is that as the unemployment rate has come down over recent years,
there has been little progress on reducing very long-term unemployment, defined as those who
are unemployed for more than two years (Graph 9). Addressing the causes of this chronic
unemployment remains an important challenge for our community. More positively, the share of
the labour force that has been unemployed between one and two years has trended down over
recent times.
Another lens on job matching and the overall tightness of the labour market is the rate of
job mobility; that is, how often people change their jobs. Here, the evidence is
interesting. Despite the frequent reports of a lack of job security and regular job
switching by millennials, the average time that workers are staying with an employer is
increasing. Reflecting this, the share of employed people who switch employers in a given
year is the lowest it has been in a long time (Graph 10). Looking at the data by
occupation, the rate of job mobility is lowest for managers and business professionals and
highest for tradespeople and workers in the hospitality industry.
In a tight labour market, we would expect to see either strong wages growth or frequent job
changing as businesses seek out workers. But we are seeing neither at present. One possible
explanation for this is the uncertainty that many people feel about the future. This
uncertainty means that if you have a job you want to keep it rather than take a risk with a
new employer. This might be especially so if you also have a large mortgage. So it is
possible that the high level of household debt is also affecting labour market dynamics.
Wages
I will now turn to the fourth perspective on labour market tightness – that is wages
growth.
Over the past year, wages growth has picked up as the labour market tightened. This is not
surprising given the strength of demand for labour. But the pick-up has been fairly modest
and is only evident in the private sector (Graph 11). Over the past year, the
private-sector Wage Price Index increased by 2.4 per cent, up from 1.9 per cent
in the previous year. The past two quarters have, however, seen lower wage increases than in
the previous two quarters.
In contrast to trends in the private sector, wages growth in the public sector has been
steady at around 2½ per cent, largely reflecting the wage caps across much of
the public sector.
It is also worth pointing out that overall wages growth in New South Wales and Victoria has
been running at just 2½ per cent despite the unemployment rate being 4½ per cent
or lower over the past year.
Another perspective on wages growth is from the national accounts, which reports average
earnings per hour worked (Graph 12). This measure is volatile, but the latest data
painted a fairly weak picture, with average hourly earnings up by just 1 per cent
over the past year.
In summary, the overall picture from these various windows into the labour market is that
despite the strong employment growth over recent times, there is still considerable spare
capacity in the labour market. We remain short of the unemployment rate associated with full
employment, there is significant underemployment and there is further potential for labour
force participation to increase when the jobs are there. Consistent with all of this, wages
growth remains modest and is below the rate that would ensure that inflation is comfortably
within the 2 to 3 per cent range. The one caveat to this assessment is the
difficulty that some firms are having finding workers with the necessary skills. This
underlines the importance of workplace training.
Monetary Policy
I would like to finish with a few words on monetary policy.
As you are aware, the Reserve Bank Board reduced the cash rate to 1¼ per cent
at its meeting earlier this month. This was the first adjustment in nearly three years.
This decision was not in response to a deterioration in the economic outlook since the
previous update was published in early May. Rather, it reflected a judgement that we could
do better than the path we looked to be on.
The analysis that I have shared with you today supports the conclusion that the Australian
economy can sustain a higher rate of employment growth and a lower unemployment rate than
previously thought likely. Most indicators suggest that there is still a fair degree of
spare capacity in the economy. It is both possible and desirable to reduce that spare
capacity. Doing so will see more people in jobs, reduce underemployment and boost household
incomes. It will also provide greater confidence that inflation will increase to be
comfortably within the medium-term target range.
Monetary policy is one way of helping get us onto to a better path. The decision earlier this
month will assist here. It will support the economy through its effect on the exchange rate,
lowering the cost of finance and boosting disposable incomes. In turn, this will support
employment growth and inflation consistent with the target.
It would, however, be unrealistic to expect that lowering interest rates by ¼ of a
percentage point will materially shift the path we look to be on. The most recent
data – including the GDP and labour market data – do not suggest we are making
any inroads into the economy’s spare capacity. Given this, the possibility of lower
interest rates remains on the table. It is not unrealistic to expect a further reduction in
the cash rate as the Board seeks to wind back spare capacity in the economy and deliver
inflation outcomes in line with the medium-term target.
It is important though to recognise that monetary policy is not the only option, and there
are limitations to what can be achieved. As a country we should also be looking at other
ways to get closer to full employment. One option is fiscal policy, including through
spending on infrastructure. Another is structural policies that support firms expanding,
investing, innovating and employing people. Both of these options need to be kept in mind as
the various arms of public policy seek to maximise the economic prosperity of the people of
Australia.