Robust employment growth in Australia has continued with a 56.3k rise in December once again blitzing modest expectations (15k) - a common theme throughout 2024. Strong labour demand drove a retightening in the labour market over the back half of the year. Market reaction to today's report was muted, although perhaps what that reflects is that a hawkish repricing of RBA rate cut expectations for the February meeting amid the rally in global bonds overnight is hard work. Essentially, the domestic labour market gives the RBA no reason to cut, but markets are betting that the upcoming Q4 CPI release (January 29) might.
By the numbers | December
- Employment accelerated by a net 56.3k in December (part time +80k/full time -23.7k), significantly outperforming the 15k consensus figure following a 28.2k rise in November (revised down from 35.6k).
- After falling to an 8-month low of 3.9% in November, the unemployment rate lifted back to 4.0% in December - in line with expectations; however, the underemployment rate fell from 6.1% to 6.0% - its 4th consecutive decline - to be at its lowest since February 2023. Total labour force underutilisation remained at 10.0%, holding at a low back to September 2023.
- Labour force participation returned to cycle highs in December rising to 67.1% from 67.0% in the prior month. The employment to population ratio increased from 64.3% to 64.5%, also at record highs.
- Hours worked advanced at their fastest pace in 9 months lifting by 0.5% month-on-month from flat growth in November; base effects saw annual growth surge from 2.1% to 3.2% (hours in December 2023 fell 0.5%m/m). Across the quarter, hours worked increased by 0.6%.
The details | December
Employment closed out 2024 surging by a net 56.3k in December. The gain was driven entirely by an 80k increase in part time work, the segment's largest contribution since the reopening from the 2021 Covid lockdowns. Full time work fell in December (-23.7k), a soft finish to a stellar year in which two-thirds (299k) of the total increase in employment in 2024 (444k) was in the full time segment.
Across the quarter, employment lifted by 97k (0.7%), a solid result to follow the very strong gain seen in the previous quarter of 153k (1.1%). Employment gains averaged a little over 32k per month in the final quarter of the year, a comfortably sustainable run rate going into 2025 supported by job vacancies that remain at high levels.
Despite edging back up to 4.0% in December the unemployment rate remains historically low, while the broader trend of the labour market retightening into year-end continued. The underemployment rate stood at 6.6% at the start of 2024 and lifted to 6.7% by May but went onto to decline over the back half to end the year at 6.0% - its lowest level since February 2023. Labour force underutilisation followed a similar pattern declining from 10.6% to 10.0% over the year, indicating that current labour market conditions resemble the historical tights of earlier cycles.
One of the defining features of the current cycle is that the strength of labour demand has been matched with a response from the supply side. Labour force participation ended 2024 on record highs (67.1%), up more than 1.5ppts on pre-Covid levels. Meanwhile, the employment to population ratio (64.5%) - the share of Australians (of working age) in work - has never been higher.
Hours worked lifted sharply by 0.5% in December to be up by 0.6% over the quarter. That compares to a 0.8% rise in quarterly hours in Q3. Annual growth accelerated from 2.1% to 3.2%, its fastest pace in 16 months - albeit flattered by base effects. For much of the past 18 months, employment growth has outpaced hours worked. Reflecting that dynamic, average monthly hours trended lower in 2024: the 12-month average was 135.5 hours, down from 137.8 hours in 2023.
In summary | December
The Australian labour market was in robust shape as the sun set on 2024. Employment increased strongly through the year, continually defying expectations to weaken alongside a slowing economy. This saw labour market conditions retighten into year-end, with the unemployment rate around historic lows at 4.0% and below RBA forecasts for 4.3%. That balances with record high labour force participation. Elevated job vacancies point to the current momentum of employment being sustainable in 2025.