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We’re creating a thousand new jobs per day - featured image
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We’re creating a thousand new jobs per day

We're creating 1,000+ jobs per day.A Thousand New Jobs Per Day

Following on from the somewhat tedious "jobs and growth", the Coalition's latest catchphrase is "a thousand new jobs per day".

In fact, even that bold claim is selling matters short across 2017, with the economy adding a monstrous +383,100 new jobs on a net basis over the year to November.

That represents huge, near-record annualised jobs growth, with the unbroken run of gains the lengthiest in nearly four decades, and threatening to break the all-time record set almost a quarter of a century go.

What makes that figure all the remarkable is the horrendous -84,100 jobs lost in the manufacturing sector, with thousands of those coming in the last quarter as Holden and Toyota shut up shop.

Infrastructure takes over

Where, then, are all of these jobs being created?

The biggest gainers included healthcare (+104,700), construction (+101,300), and education and training (+39,000), as well as jobs being created across a raft of other services industries.

Thus while manufacturing resumes its multi-decade secular decline, healthcare & social assistance and construction between them now account for more than 2.8 million jobs, and education & training more than 1 million more (largely thanks to the 578,000 foreign students now studying in Australia).

A Thousand New Jobs Per Day Table 1

The government's push for road, rail, transport, and other infrastructure projects has paid serious dividends here, with construction employment soaring to a record 1.165 million or 9.4 per cent of the entire workforce.

SEEK's job advertisement figures show that engineering and construction sectors will continue to boom in 2018.

3 largest cities creating jobs

Greater Sydney and Melbourne are creating jobs at an electric pace, with each of the major cities creating more than +88,000 jobs on a net basis over the year to November 2017.

Only one state is creating jobs in its regions at a meaningful rate, being Queensland, while Brisbane too has created tens of thousands of new jobs, at an impressive +52,200 year-on-year.

A Thousand New Jobs Per Day Table 2

Sydney's unemployment rate continues to fall, recording a rate of just 4.3 per cent in the month of November 2017, once again considerably lower than the 4.9 per cent equivalent result last year.

Full employment for the harbour city, then — it should ignore the whingeing and crack on and update those decrepit sports stadia now too.

A Thousand New Jobs Per Day Table 3

Gradual tightening

Finally, while there remains a fair bit of slack in the labour force nationally, most importantly when looked at in volume measures terms, we can see conclusive evidence than underutilisation is falling.

In other words, while there may be a million Aussies that want more work (inevitable given the structural shift to more contracting and part time work...and unfailingly reported ad nauseam) the amount more work they actually want has been falling for three years now.

Don't expect anyone in the misery media contingent to report that, though — in reality, most probably wouldn't even know it anyway!

A Thousand New Jobs Per Day Table 4

The volume measures of underutilisation are no longer especially high in historical terms — during the mining boom, at the peak of the labour shortage in the 2007-8 financial year the underutilisation rate fell to a fraction under 6 per cent, but that was an anomaly characterised by booming wages growth.

The wrap

The number of reported unemployed may not have declined all that much year, but there was a thunderous +2.82 per cent increase in the labour force total, while the participation rate has swelled to its highest level since 2010.

There was an appropriate time for gloomy reporting of the labour force figures.

But that was 2014, and 2017 has been a corker of a year!

With job ads tracking at the highest level in six years, there's plenty more good news to come in 2018 too.

Great to see!

About Pete is a Chartered Accountant, Chartered Secretary and has a Financial Planning Diploma. Using a long term approach to building businesses, investing in equities, & owning a portfolio he achieved financial independence at the age of 33. Visit his blog
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