Unemployment rate remains steady at 4.1 per cent for three months in a row
One state has for the seventh consecutive month recorded the country’s highest unemployment rate, as the likelihood of a rate cut this year fades.
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Australia’s unemployment rate has remained steady at 4.1 per cent for the third month in a row, with one state for the seventh consecutive month recording the highest rate in the country.
Victoria maintained the highest rate in the country at 4.5 per cent – alongside the Northern Territory – when the October figures were released on Thursday.
It marks the seventh consecutive month Victoria has recorded the nighest unemployment rate of all the states.
Shadow state treasurer Brad Roswell said Victorians were paying the price for the state’s large debt.
“For seven months now Victoria has had the highest unemployment rate out of all Australian states, as business conditions fall, taxes continue to rise, and households suffer under ongoing cost-of-living pressures,” Mr Roswell said.
“Victoria’s debt is set to hit $187.8bn by 2027-28, with daily interest repayments to reach $26m, more than $1m-per hour.”
Across the country, the Northern Territory was the only jurisdiction to record a rise in unemployment last month, up 0.1 per cent. Queensland was the only other mover, shaving 0.1 per cent from its ledger.
In seasonally adjusted terms, the Territory has the highest unemployment, at 4.6 per cent, above Victoria at 4.5 per cent.
JOB FIGURES OFFER NO RATE HOPE
As the unemployment rate held steady for the third month in a row, the country added about 15,900 jobs to the economy in October, softer than what economists had forecast.
However, the early indication that Australia’s “exceptionally resilient” labour market may be cooling will do little to sway the Reserve Bank to cut rates this year, with a December rate hold “all but guaranteed”.
Seasonally-adjusted monthly labour force figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Thursday revealed Australia added 9700 full-time jobs and 6200 part time jobs month-on-month, despite predictions October would record 25,000 new jobs.
The participation rate in the jobs market decreased slightly by 0.1 per cent to 67.1 per cent, with underemployment also decreasing to 6.2 per cent.
IG analyst Tony Sycamore said Thursday’s figures indicated that while Australia’s “exceptionally resilient labour market” showed “some modest indications of cooling,” it would likely not impact the cash rate.
“While it seems improbable that this slowdown will push the unemployment rate to the RBA’s forecast of 4.3 per cent by December, it provides the central bank with the breathing room to maintain its focus on inflation and keep rates in restrictive territory into year-end, all without any significant signs of deterioration in the labour market,” he said.
Markets have currently tipped a 10 per cent Christmas Eve rate cut, with a full 25 basis point rate cut not priced until August.
Mr Sycamore said this week’s data “has yet to see any noticeable change to this pricing”.
BDO Economics Partner Anders Magnusson said the latest figures “all but guaranteed” a rate hold when the RBA meets for the final time this year in December.
“I expect the RBA to continue with its cautionary approach of holding the cash rate until it is satisfied that underlying annual CPI inflation is sustainably within the target band of 2 to 3 per cent,” he said.
“The participation rate, a supply-side indicator in the labour market, decreased a little in October but remains historically high with strong participation from women and older Australians in particular.”
OCTOBER ‘SLOWEST MONTH’ FOR JOBS GROWTH
ABS head of labour statistics Bjorn Jarvis said that while employment figures continued to grow, October’s figures revealed the slowest incline in recent months.
“While employment grew in October, the 0.1 per cent increase was the slowest growth in recent months. This was lower than each of the previous six months, when employment rose by an average of 0.3 per cent per month,” he said.
“With population growth in October outpacing the small rise in employment and unemployment, the participation rate fell slightly to 67.1 per cent, while the employment-to-population ratio remained at the historical high of 64.4 per cent”.
While Labor only recently celebrated creating more than a million jobs since it came to government in 2022, Jim Chalmers said global uncertainty, 13-year high interest rates and cost-of-living pressures have resulted in a softer economy and labour market.
However he recognised families were “under the pump”.
“While our labour market has remained resilient to date and helps us confront these challenges from a position of strength, it is softening around the edges with more modest employment growth last month,” he said.
“Our focus is on easing the cost of living, getting more people into work and helping Australians earn more and keep more of what they earn, and we’re making good progress.”
The RBA has warned Australia’s labour market is expected to ease over the next few months, which will put downward pressure on wage growth and household budgets.
The central bank’s November outlook forecast the unemployment rate to rise by 0.1 per cent in the coming months, before creeping from 4.1 per cent to 4.4. per cent by June 2025.
Household wage growth was also tipped to fall from 3.6 per cent to 3.4 per cent from December 2024, and continue to track lower than previous expectations to December 2025.
Originally published as Unemployment rate remains steady at 4.1 per cent for three months in a row