Australian wages growth was unchanged rising by 0.8% in the December quarter as the annual pace firmed from 3.3% to 3.4%. Both outcomes matched market and RBA forecasts. Following a 25bps rate hike earlier this month, markets are pricing in a further increase in the cash rate to 4.1%. A surprise - in either direction - in tomorrow's Labour Force Survey for January could see pricing adjust.
The Wage Price Index, a quarterly measure of wage inflation in the Australian labour market, provided almost no surprises in today's release. Wages growth was 0.8% for the second quarter in succession - though the annual pace lifted from 3.3% to 3.4% after a downward revision was made to the prior quarter. Over the past year, wages growth has remained around its current pace, fairly modest by historical standards - though the RBA raised rates earlier this month maintaining that the labour market was tight and that the economy was more supply-constrained than thought. It also said that weak productivity growth meant that unit labour costs were putting upward pressure on inflation.
Wages growth in both major sectors of the labour market - private and public - was 0.8% in the December quarter. However, a sharp divergence has emerged over the past year. Annual growth in public sector wages has climbed from a 2.8% pace a year ago to 4% currently, the fastest since Q2 2024. Meanwhile, annual private sector wages growth is currently 3.4%, virtually unchanged from 3.3% a year earlier.
Analysis by the ABS in today's release shows that state government pay rises have been the impetus behind wages growth in the public sector. Over the past year, many state-based agreements have come into effect, which have frequently delivered multiple pay rises once backdated increases are included due to the time taken for these agreements to be negotiated and finalised. In the latest quarter, New South Wales saw public sector wages rise by 1.7% following a new agreement for frontline health workers. Overall, 29% of public sector jobs received a pay rise in Q4, with an average increase of 3.1% going through.
ABS chart
Government policy is also boosting private sector wages to some extent. The Commonwealth has funded pay increases to aged care and childcare workers, who typically work for private sector organisations. But wage dynamics in the private sector look to be moderate at best. Only 19% of private sector jobs saw a pay rise in the December quarter - higher than the 14% at the same time a year earlier - but the average pay rise of 3.7% was the same as a year ago. Two years ago, the average pay rise was 4.4% and at the peak in Q3 2023 it was 5.8%.

























