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NQ economists flag conflicting Australian Bureau of Statistics job modelling data

Townsville is caught in a jobs numbers tug of war, with mixed messages from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. See how a North Qld economist is trying to the bottom of it.

Pete Faulkner, Colin Dwyer, and Clayton Cook have shared differing views on the strength of Townsville's jobs market, based on differing models released by the ABS. Picture: Supplied.
Pete Faulkner, Colin Dwyer, and Clayton Cook have shared differing views on the strength of Townsville's jobs market, based on differing models released by the ABS. Picture: Supplied.

Townsville is receiving mixed messages from the Australian Bureau of Statistics about its employment trends, with one dataset showing the city lost thousands of jobs, while another model asserts that thousands more jobs were created.

According to James Cook University adjunct professor Colin Dwyer, the jobs figures in the Townsville region dropped significantly over the year to July 2024 and the unemployment rate rose – influenced by higher borrowing costs and cost of living challenges.

Referring to the ABS’s 12-month survey data, TP Human Capital Director Clayton Cook Director said the number of jobs in the Townsville Region in July 2024 was 126,600, a decrease of 2500 jobs compared to two months ago and 6400 over the year.

“This is a 4.8 per cent drop in Townsville region job numbers for the year, the largest drop in job numbers for any Queensland region in the past year,” Mr Cook said.

“The unemployment rate in the Townsville region in July 2024 was 4.1 per cent, an increase of 1.6 per cent points over the year. The participation rate … was 66.9 per cent, a decrease of 4 per cent points over the year.”

TP Human Capital director Clayton Cook. Picture: Josephine Carter.
TP Human Capital director Clayton Cook. Picture: Josephine Carter.
Regional labour force data for Townsville, July 2024. Picture: ABS, Labour force, Australia.
Regional labour force data for Townsville, July 2024. Picture: ABS, Labour force, Australia.

The data quoted by Mr Dwyer was challenged by Far North Queensland economist Pete Faulkner, who cautioned against reading too much into the figures, saying they were “simply 12-month averages of original, not seasonally-adjusted data”.

“Our own Conus Trend series (seasonally-adjusted and based on the enhanced regional labour market data from the ABS) shows employment in Townsville was up 4500 in the year to July and up 700 in the past quarter,” Mr Faulkner said.

Conus Business Consultancy Services partner Pete Faulkner.
Conus Business Consultancy Services partner Pete Faulkner.

“The unemployment rate is 4.8 per cent, and it’s been between 4.7 and 4.9 per cent since June 2023. Participation rate increasing by 0.7 percentage points over the year is the reason the unemployment rate has been stable despite employment growth.”

The Queensland Government Statistician’s Office (QGSO) told Mr Dwyer they “didn’t think that the new modelling system was robust enough” and it lacked variables they regarded as important.

“Unfortunately for the Townsville region, those two data sets are moving in different trends,” he said.

Mr Dwyer said his data was supported by what he saw on the ground in Townsville in July.

“I could see that cafes and restaurants weren’t as busy, and those particular business owners were telling me that they weren’t busy and that they were putting staff off,” he said.

“It was a cost of living issue … having to pay higher electricity costs … higher insurance, and there were fewer customers coming through the doors.”

Six weeks ago, Mr Dwyer wrote to the ABS seeking to gain a better understanding of the differing models, but was yet to hear back.

This week he enlisted help from Queensland Senator Susan McDonald to look into the issue and prompt the ABS to respond to his questions.

The ABS was approached for comment.

leighton.smith@news.com.au

Originally published as NQ economists flag conflicting Australian Bureau of Statistics job modelling data

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Original URL: https://www.ntnews.com.au/news/nq-economists-flag-conflicting-australian-bureau-of-statistics-job-modelling-data/news-story/b0eacf3c389c07eeeed9ae2c03846d5d