The Australian labour market in 2002

The Australian labour market continues to demonstrate resilience in the face of weaknesses in the international economy and domestic economy. The US economy remains in the doldrums and Japan still remains in recession. Locally, a severe drought has wiped at least one per cent off projected GDP growt...

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Main Authors: Burgess, John, Mitchell, William, Preston, Alison
Format: Journal Article
Published: Sage Publications Ltd. 2003
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/27557
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author Burgess, John
Mitchell, William
Preston, Alison
author_facet Burgess, John
Mitchell, William
Preston, Alison
author_sort Burgess, John
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The Australian labour market continues to demonstrate resilience in the face of weaknesses in the international economy and domestic economy. The US economy remains in the doldrums and Japan still remains in recession. Locally, a severe drought has wiped at least one per cent off projected GDP growth. Yet, for the 10th successive year, jobs growth remains strong in Australia. Despite this record, employers and the Federal government continue to call for further reforms in order to ‘free’ up the labour market. With the profits share of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) at historic highs and trade union density at historic lows, the arguments are distinctly hollow. Indeed, there remains a considerable unfinished reform agenda for the Australian labour market. A decade of strong jobs growth has made only modest inroads into labour under-utilisation, it has seen unfettered working time developments, and important issues remain of equality and access to entitlements that confront many women workers.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-275572017-09-13T15:55:20Z The Australian labour market in 2002 Burgess, John Mitchell, William Preston, Alison The Australian labour market continues to demonstrate resilience in the face of weaknesses in the international economy and domestic economy. The US economy remains in the doldrums and Japan still remains in recession. Locally, a severe drought has wiped at least one per cent off projected GDP growth. Yet, for the 10th successive year, jobs growth remains strong in Australia. Despite this record, employers and the Federal government continue to call for further reforms in order to ‘free’ up the labour market. With the profits share of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) at historic highs and trade union density at historic lows, the arguments are distinctly hollow. Indeed, there remains a considerable unfinished reform agenda for the Australian labour market. A decade of strong jobs growth has made only modest inroads into labour under-utilisation, it has seen unfettered working time developments, and important issues remain of equality and access to entitlements that confront many women workers. 2003 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/27557 10.1111/1472-9296.00077 Sage Publications Ltd. restricted
spellingShingle Burgess, John
Mitchell, William
Preston, Alison
The Australian labour market in 2002
title The Australian labour market in 2002
title_full The Australian labour market in 2002
title_fullStr The Australian labour market in 2002
title_full_unstemmed The Australian labour market in 2002
title_short The Australian labour market in 2002
title_sort australian labour market in 2002
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/27557