Australian labour market – considerably weaker in November (not even close to full employment)

I should remind myself not to listen to the media (even the public broadcaster) when the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) releases the latest labour force data – Labour Force, Australia – for November 2025 – as it did today (December 11, 2025). The commentary immediately after that data release today was the exemplification of mainstream massaging of the truth. The ABC had some bank economist on telling the nation that the data showed that Australia was operating above capacity (over full employment) and interest rates would have to rise further to discipline inflation. He didn’t mention that his corporation would benefit from such rate rises via increased profits. He also failed to tell the listeners that while unemployment remained stable at 4.3 per cent (only because participation fell in the face of falling employment), underemployment rose further to 6.2 per cent (up 0.4 points), and the broad labour underutilisation rate rose to 10.5 per cent – think about that – 10.5 per cent of available and willing labour in Australia and this so-called expert thinks that is full employment requires unemployment to rise at least a further 0.2 points. Meaning is lost and neoliberal ideology and corporate-speak replaces it. Disgusting. The interviewer was also terrible and should be sacked for his mistakes and failure to hold the ‘expert’ to account. Such is the national broadcaster in Australia these days. The reality is that it is nonsensical to argue that Australia being close to full employment. Without the fall in the participation rate, the official unemployment rate would have been 4.63 per cent rather than its current official value of 4.3 per cent. The labour market is considerably weaker in November and there is substantial scope for more job creation given the slack that is present.

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