Despite the economy only just popping its head up after 21 months of “per-person recession”, our jobs market has been going gangbusters. How can it possibly be so strong? It’s this strength that has made the Reserve Bank so reluctant to cut interest rates.
This week we learnt from the “national accounts” that the economy – real gross domestic product – grew by a princely 0.6 per cent during the three months to the end of December. This caused its annual rate of growth to jump from a very weak 0.8 per cent to a not-quite-so-weak 1.3 per cent.
Trouble is, until now, the economy’s growth hasn’t been enough to keep up with the growth in our population. So real GDP per person fell by 1.7 per cent over the seven quarters to last September, but – thank heavens! – rose by 0.1 per cent during the December quarter.
If we’re lucky, GDP per person will now keep going forward rather than backward in 2025.
But the weakness in economic growth – caused by the Reserve keeping its foot on the interest-rate brakes since May 2022, as it fought to get inflation down – simply doesn’t fit with our roaring jobs market.
Professor Jeff Borland, of the University of Melbourne, is probably the nation’s top expert on the labour market. So I asked him to explain this paradox.
To show just how strong the jobs market has been, Borland notes that, although the total number of people in Australia with jobs grew at a rate averaging about 2 per cent a year over the previous two decades, it grew by 3.5 per cent over the year to this January. It grew almost as fast over the past two years.
Of course, the rate at which the number of jobs increases is normally closely related to the rate at which the economy’s growing. Borland calculates that, had the usual relationship between the two held, you’d expect employment to have grown by 3.4 per cent since the end of 2021. Get this: the actual growth is 9.5 per cent. That’s gangbusters.
But why has employment been growing at such an extraordinary rate? Borland says it’s all to do with growth in the “non-market” part of the economy, which covers public administration and safety; healthcare and social assistance; and education and training.
Now, if you were Donald Trump or Elon Musk, you’d think this meant a massive increase in public servants sitting round drinking tea and not doing anything of any use to anyone.
If you had more sense, you’d know it’s mainly the growth in the “care economy” we keep hearing about. More people being employed in aged care, disability care and childcare. You’d know these women work their butts off helping our oldies, our kiddies and our disabled cousin.
The care economy’s growing because of the ageing of the population, because we need our women in the paid workforce not at home minding kids, and because we’ve decided the disabled should no longer be hidden away being looked after by some poor rello.
You’d remember the various royal commissions exposing the scandalously poor treatment of people in care, how neglected they were by the previous Liberal federal government, and how much the Albanese government has had to spend trying to catch up. (Note, “non-market” means many of these workers deliver a service you don’t pay for over the counter. But most of the extra workers would be working for private sector providers.)
Borland calculates that, had non-market sector employment grown at the same rate as the market sector, total employment would be almost 700,000 lower than it is.
But why hasn’t this massive growth in the workforce led to higher wage rates as workers were bid away from other employers? Borland says one reason is that there’s been a downward shift in the level of wage inflation for any given degree of tightness in the labour market. (Reserve Bank please note.)
He says workers in the non-market sector don’t push for pay rises the way workers in mining or the utilities or construction did in earlier times.
But for so much growth in employment to be possible, there has to be a supply of extra workers available. This extra supply means workers don’t need to be bid away from their present employer.
Guess what? Since the pandemic, we’ve had strong growth in the population due to high immigration. Borland calculates that population growth explains about half the employment growth from late 2021 to late 2022, all the employment growth from late 2022 to early last year, and since then, it’s been about three-quarters of the story.
What can’t be explained by population growth is explained by people already in Australia who didn’t have paid employment deciding that, since so many new jobs were available, they’d take one and make some money.
It’s no surprise that many of these extra workers are women. What’s surprising is there are now more blokes working in the care economy.
Further delving by Boland finds that a lot of the extra jobs have gone to people under 24, suggesting many education-leavers have been finding it easier to find work.
Cost-of-living pressures may have prompted people to take a job. And the rise of working from home seems to have enabled more people to take a paid job or work more hours.
And get this: older people have been more inclined to keep working or even return to the workforce from retirement. Since the early noughties, the proportion of people over 64 who are still working has risen from 6 per cent to 15 per cent (don’t look at me).
The Reserve Bank has made no secret of its reluctance to cut interest rates when the jobs market is so “tight”. It worries that, if the economy starts growing more strongly, we might soon run out of workers, which would set inflation off again.
But I think you could just as easily conclude from our recent experience that the economy has shown its ability to find all the extra workers it needs.