Australian unemployment jumped to 10.3% in June – the highest since January 2023 (10.7%)
In June unemployment jumped 1.9% to 10.3%, according to the latest Roy Morgan employment series data. However, there was a decline in under-employment in June, down 0.5% points to 9.3%.
Movements in under-employment are highly correlated to movements in the level of part-time employment – which fell in June for the first time since January.
- Employment was down in June for a second straight month, although full-time employment rose:
Australian employment was down 72,000 to 13,635,000 in June. The drop was due to a fall in part-time employment, down 167,000 to 4,697,000, while full-time employment was up 94,000 to 8,937,000.
- Unemployment (full-time and part-time workers) increased in June with more people looking for full-time and part-time work:
1,572,000 Australians were unemployed (10.3% of the workforce) in June, an increase of 314,000 from May with more people looking for full-time work, up 94,000 to 608,000 and more people looking for part-time work, up a large 220,000 to 964,000.
- The workforce increased to a new record high in June, up over 700,000 from a year ago:
The workforce in June was 15,206,000 (up 241,000 from May) – comprised of 13,635,000 employed Australians (down 72,000) and 1,572,000 unemployed Australians looking for work (up 314,000).
- Overall unemployment and under-employment up 1.4% points in June to 19.6%:
In June unemployment jumped 1.9% to 10.3%, according to the latest Roy Morgan employment series data. However, there was a decline in under-employment in June, down 0.5% points to 9.3%.
In addition to the unemployed, 1.42 million Australians (9.3% of the workforce, down 0.5% points) were under-employed – working part-time but looking for more work, down 50,000 from May.
In total 2.99 million Australians (19.6% of the workforce) were either unemployed or under-employed in May, up by 264,000 from May.
Compared to early March 2020, before the nation-wide lockdown, in June 2023 there were more than 800,000 more Australians either unemployed or under-employed (+4% points) even though overall employment (13,634,000) is almost 800,000 higher than it was pre-COVID-19 (12,872,000).
Roy Morgan’s unemployment figure of 10.3% is almost triple the ABS estimate of 3.6% for May and is closer to the combined ABS unemployment and under-employment figure of 10.0%.
The latest monthly figures from the ABS indicate that the people working fewer hours in May 2023 (595,900) due to illness, injury or sick leave was around 135,000 higher than the pre-pandemic average of the five years to May 2019 (460,710) – a difference of 135,190.
If this higher than pre-pandemic average of workers (135,190) are added to the combined ABS unemployment and under-employment figure of 1,453,000 we find a total of 1,588,190 people could be considered unemployed or under-employed equivalent to 10.9% of the workforce.
Source: Roy Morgan Single Source January 2019 – June 2023. Average monthly interviews 5,000.
Note: Roy Morgan unemployment estimates are actual data while the ABS estimates are seasonally adjusted.
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