Hospitality operators, such asSydney-based Solotel, say they are still struggling to fill all their staff vacancies.(ABC News: John Gunn)
Unemployment is steady at 3.5 per cent, after November's jobless rate was revised higher andon the back of an estimated 14,600 jobs being lost last month.
The decline in employed Australians might have pushed the jobless rate higher, but for a fall in the proportion of people in work or looking for it,according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
Australia's so-called participation rate dropped from an historic high of 66.8 per cent back to 66.6 per cent, as some people dropped out of looking for work.
Hours worked also declined by 0.5 per cent, in part due to the continued high level of absences due to COVID-19.
In December, we saw the number of people working reduced hours due to illness increasing by 86,000, to 606,000, which is [more than]50 per cent higher than we would usually see at this time of the year, the bureau's head of labour statistics, LaurenFord, said.
However, a rise in the underemployment rate to its highest level since July (6.1 per cent) was an indication this was not solely down to sick leave.
The number caught markets off guard, causing the Australian dollar to lose about a third of a cent to 69.13 US cents, as traders bet it would see the Reserve Bank ease back on interest rate rises.
Economists had generally expected unemployment to come in at 3.4 per cent, with the creation of around 22,500 jobs in December, according to a survey by Reuters.
Marcel Thieliant from Capital Economics saysthat the 3.4 per cent jobless rate recorded in October will be the low point for unemployment.
The labour market struggled in December and it won't be long before unemployment starts to rise in earnest, he wrote in a note.
Looking ahead, employment surveys remain consistent with jobs growth of around 20,000 per month. However, the labour force has been rising more rapidly than over the last few months that as net migration has hit record highs.
Indeed, job vacancies have fallen for two consecutive quarters, while skilled vacancies have fallen by around 10 per centfrom their peak in June.
Those figures are consistent with the unemployment rate soon rising, to around 3.7 per cent, and we expect it to reach 5.0 per centby the end of next year.
ANZ senior economist Catherine Birch is expecting unemployment to remain near its current lows all year.(ABC News: Simon Tucci)
However, ANZ senior economist Catherine Birch is far more upbeat, expecting unemployment to stay in the mid-threes all year, pointing to the more than 440,000 job vacancies that still remained in the most recent data.
Recovery in migration will help with matching people to jobs, especially those highly skilled, highly experienced people [who]we need to go into these specific jobs, she told ABC News Channel.
When people arrive in Australia,not only do they add to the supply of workers but they also need to buy their own goods and services and housing and transport and all these sorts of things, so they add to the demand side as well.
Hotel, bar and restaurant operator Solotel is contributing to those vacancy figures.
Hospitality operator Solotel says it has been a lot easier to fill staff vacancies over the past six months than previously during the pandemic.(ABC News: John Gunn)
The company's chief executive,Elliot Solomon, said the companygenerally hadaround 30-50 vacancies open across its portfolio of 26 venues in Sydney and Brisbane, which employ about 1,600 people.
However, he said, the return of workers from overseas hadmade a big difference in finding staff.
Solotel chief executive Elliot Solomon says about half of his company's workforce are on visas.(ABC News: John Gunn)
It's been pretty challenging for the last couple of years since the pandemic, but I would say in the last six monthsit's become quite a lot easier, he told ABC News.
Before the pandemic, we were running around 35 per centof our workforce being on visas. Obviously, the majority of those left during the pandemic.
Since [borders] reopening in the last few months, we've actually seen that number spike to about 50 per centof our workforce.
I think that's got to do with summer and working holiday visas. So I imagine that will drop down again.
UK national Kieran Finney is one of those workers on short-term visa, although he is hoping to be sponsored by Solotel so that he can stay in Australia long-term.
Working holiday visa holder Kieran Finney is the assistant restaurant managerat Opera Bar inSydney.(ABC News: John Gunn)
It's Sydney's most iconic bar. I've got a view of the Harbour Bridge from my office. Worseplaces to be! he said.
He found it easy to get a job in the industry and Opera Bar gave him training.
A lot of my friends were working in and around hospitality. They just kind of said, 'Come on in'.Had a trial shift and then, yeah, picked it up.
However, there have been plenty of job vacancies for existing Australian residents too.Bailey Linton-Simpkins was able to pick and choose amongpotential hospitality employers.
Bailey Linton-Simpkins started working at Opera Bar two weeks after finishing his HSC late last year.(ABC News: John Gunn)
I was looking for about a week after I finished high school, and I had trial shifts at different places, he told ABC News.
But, after having almost four years of experience by them, I knew what I wanted, and I said no to a couple of places that weren't exactly what felt right.
Mr Solomon says the jobs market will remain strong in hospitality, even if the economy slows, and his company has been offering incentives —such assign-on and referral bonuses as well as increased staff discounts — to attract and retain workers.
What we found as a companyis that,during an economic downturn, while people may go out a little bit less, they still go out, because they still want to socialise, they still want to have fun, he said.
They might just reduce the number of times they go out.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-01-19/unemployment-jobs-december-2022-abs/101871126
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