After yesterday’s jobs figures, it’s clear that any wages growth for most workers is way off in the future, even if we accept the rather silly arguments advanced by the “just around the corner” mob.
The argument from the government is that we just need to wait a little longer and the strong jobs growth we’ve seen will finally push wages growth up. Only problem is, that strong growth has definitely peaked and is falling away. It’s still solid growth, welcome growth — but well down on what we enjoyed in 2017.
Most commentary focused on the fall in the seasonally adjusted jobless rate to 5.4% from 5.6%. Unfortunately, that was driven by a slide in the participation rate as people left the labour force, when we’ve been used to stable or rising participation in recent months; indeed, rising participation has been the Turnbull government’s unquestionable achievement. But the less volatile trend series showed a more realistic picture: no fall in the jobless rate at 5.5%, which is unchanged since August last year.
That’s because jobs growth continues to slide — from an annual rate of 3.3% in December 2017 and January of this year, to 2.6% in May. In terms of the number of actual jobs created, they peaked at an annual rate of 400,000 in February, and are now down 20% to an annual 318,000 in May. Sixty-eight thousand extra workers were employed during the past six months, (seasonally adjusted, 78,000 on a trend basis) down from 208,000 employed in the previous six months, which means the government will have to redo its advertisements claiming 1,000 jobs a day — now it’s just over 500. And the slowdown is mainly in full-time jobs — in May, they grew 4000 in trend terms compared to 12,000 part-time jobs.
In his speech on Wednesday, Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe noted that there remains some “space capacity” in the wages market, meaning low wages growth was “understandable”. His deputy, Guy Debelle suggested last month “it may take a lower unemployment rate than we currently expect to generate a sustained move higher than the 2 per cent focal point evident in many wage outcomes today.”
Given yesterday’s jobs numbers, that suggests there’ll be no wages growth (and no inflation or interest rate rises) any time soon, and certainly not the kind of optimistic wage growth the government based its budget forecasts on. It’s hard to see how it will even hit its dramatically lowered forecasts for 2017-18. In 2016, the government told us WPI would be growing at 2.75% this year. Last year’s budget lowered this to 2.5%. MYEFO in December lowered it to 2.25%. In the year to March, it was 2.1%. It’s possible that it could hit 2.25% in the June quarter. Then the government will claim vindication against the naysayers, hoping we’ve forgotten how much it was already ratcheted its forecast down — and hoping that we’re OK with the new normal of wages growth that is only ahead of inflation in a few booming sectors like health and education, leaving private sector workers going backwards in real terms.
And while the Reserve Bank is at least prepared to discuss wages growth and what to do about it, some others in the governing class remain utterly obtuse. An extraordinary editorial in today’s issue of The Australian Financial Review effectively suggests workers should just suck it up on low wages growth.”Those who whinge most about the limited growth in national income typically are the most strident opponents of changes that would actually increase it. They call it ‘fairness’,” according to the Fin’s anonymous ranter (though it sounded a lot like the comments on the same subject on Insiders by Fin editor Michael Stutchbury), arguing that workers enjoyed big pay rises during the mining boom. “At least part of the growth slowdown since then is statistical,” he/they say. “Statistical”. That should comfort workers around Australia going backwards, that their declining real wages are just “statistical”. Kinda like the massive falls in the Fin’s circulation in recent years have been merely “statistical”, eh?
Only an “unquestioned achievement” to journalists who fail to actually ask questions…..like yourself, I fear.
https://tradingeconomics.com/australia/labor-force-participation-rate
Take a look at the graph above & you’ll see that Labor saw similar peaks in participation rates during their time in office-but sustained average participation rates of above 65%. By contrast, average participation rates under the Coalition have been *below* 65%, with the numbers only rising above 65% since the end of 2017.
In spite of this, however, Labor managed to keep average unemployment rates at around 5.2% for their 6 year tenure, whilst unemployment rates under the Coalition have averaged around the 5.8% mark…as can be seen in the graph below.
https://tradingeconomics.com/australia/unemployment-rate
So please stop spreading Liberal Party propaganda, Bernard, ’cause it doesn’t make you look clever or independent. Or maybe you’re just gunning for a job at News Corpse?
Oh, & with the exception of this month’s figures, Youth Unemployment has been higher under this government than under Labor……though I wonder if the most recent drop was due to all the measures they’ve brought in to make it near impossible for young Australians to collect unemployment benefits? If so, then no wonder the levels of homelessness & suicide have risen so sharply over the last 5 years.
https://tradingeconomics.com/australia/youth-unemployment-rate
In my files I have this article by Crikey:
“The AFR once had a long and honourable history as the go-to source for exposes on the shonks and spivs of the corporate sector, the place where investors could get a reality check on the relentless self-promotion of the business world. These days, unless it’s trade union corruption or mismanagement, the AFR seems to be uninterested, preferring instead to run the latest “exclusive” media release from a business exec, or run yet another kid-glove interview with James Packer. Even when companies like Rio Tinto make multi-billion dollar misjudgments here and offshore, the AFR is content to run the standard line that it’s all about how Australian workers are too expensive and there’s too much regulation.
http://uat.crikey.com.au/2013/06/21/the-bespoke-luxury-world-of-afr-chief-michael-stutchbury/
Industrial relations reform has always been a big issue for the Australian Financial Review. But since Michael Stutchbury took over as editor-in-chief, the “battle for the workplace” has become even more dominant in the paper’s front pages and editorials. An article published in Jan 2012 titled, “Fair Work rules ‘decimating’ tourism” is a typical example – as is the accompanying tub-thumping editorial.
Stutchbury, a former editor and economics editor at The Australian, is a well-known economic rationalist. Former colleague Elisabeth Wynhausen describes him in her book The Short Goodbye as “on the further fringes of free market fundamentalism” and recalled him arguing it was wrong to stop people from working for a few dollars an hour if they felt like it. Rhinehart and Woodside would agree with that heartfelt opinon of Stutchbury!”
No cred AFR nor Stutterchbury
Screaming Lord Stutch and his Official Monster Raving Loony Economic Rationalist Party?
Takes a servile servant mentality to prostrate before Murdoch and Stutch has it in spades.
Yes. Stutchbury – good old stitchup. I don’t think he has anything positive to offer debate on economics or anything else for that matter on Australian society. He regularly (too much in my opinion) appears on Insiders where he brings his shitty hateful talking points in paper form with no other purpose than to shove these talking points down the throats of the ABC viewers and over the top of dissenting ABC Insider guest panellists. They can’t get a word in edgeways as Stutch is moronically verbatim reading from his bloody papers with his neo-liberal, free market, union and worker bashing gospel. I guess Fairfax must have run out of good economic editors. Michael Coorey is I think the best journalist anywhere anytime in the country and he should have been given the gig.
Any there is no jobs boom with unemployment hovering around the 6% mark. And when most young people not gainfully employed on a mix of youth or student allowance. Is this guy for real? When should this government be given credit for anything except to say that the aliens from outer space haven’t yet rogered us. That’s coming.
They’ll rise “after we elect Turnbull”, won’t they? Just vote and see?
Right?
Isn’t that the message?
And didn’t the Lord Stutch bottom lip drop when Farr tore the wings off his “Tinkerbell Economics”.
These are real people struggling to stay afloat on Shit Creek, with a Stalled Wages outboard motor – siphoning savings to stay afloat – they’re not “just lefty whingers”.
15 hours in Moderation?
30 hours?
60+ hours for this?