Jobless rate rises to highest level since 2021 as number of unemployed Australians jumps

It comes as the Reserve Bank closely monitors the labour market before its next monetary policy meeting in August.

A large crowd of people moving through an outdoor shopping centre.

There was a nearly 34,000 increase in people without work, the Australian Bureau of Statistics reported. Source: AAP / Steven Saphore

The jobless rate has risen to 4.3 per cent — its highest rate since 2021 — surpassing expectations as the number of unemployed Australians jumped.

Financial markets had expected the rate to remain steady at 4.1 per cent in June, but there was a nearly 34,000 increase in people without work, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

Employment rose by 2,000, up 2 per cent compared to the same month last year, after part-time employment grew by 40,000 and full-time employment fell by 38,000 people.

Until this result, the unemployment rate had sat at 4.1 per cent for three consecutive monthly readings.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) will closely monitor the labour market before its next monetary policy meeting in August, NAB's head of Australian economics Gareth Spence said.
"The focus for the RBA will be ensuring the labour market remains healthy going forward," Spence said

"The timing of [rate] cuts is not super important. It's more about, where do they end up?"

In a move that shocked analysts and disappointed mortgage holders, the RBA kept the cash rate steady at 3.85 per cent earlier this month.

Most economists had pencilled in a 0.25 per cent cut on the back of slowing inflation growth.
Spence still expected the jobless rate to climb to 4.4 per cent by the end of 2025, but said economic indicators point to the labour market still being in a strong position.

RBA said in its latest monetary policy decision that labour market conditions remained tight.

"Measures of labour under-utilisation are at relatively low rates and business surveys and liaison suggest that availability of labour is still a constraint for a range of employers.

"Alternatively, labour market outcomes may prove stronger than expected, given the signal from a range of leading indicators."


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Source: AAP


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