Townsville Bulletin

Dire state of Aussie wages revealed

- ELLEN RANSLEY

AUSTRALIAN wages have grown at less than half of the annual rate of inflation, new data has revealed, with public sector workers lagging behind.

Wages have risen 1 per cent over the last three months, while the annual average is a growth of 3.1 per cent.

While the quarter marks the fastest rate of quarterly nominal wages growth since March 2012, the consumer price index at 7.3 per cent means real wages are 4.2 per cent lower over the year and have fallen back to 2011 levels.

In the private sector, wages grew 1.2 per cent over the quarter; while workers in the public sector had their pay increased by just 0.6 per cent.

Over the year, the growth in private sector wages was 3.4 per cent compared with 2.4 per cent in the public sector.

The highest quarterly and annual growth was recorded in the retail trade industry (2.4 per cent and 4.2 per cent) due to two award increases during the year.

The education and training industry recorded the lowest quarterly (0.8 per cent) and annual (2.2 per cent) growth across all industries.

Michelle Marquardt from the Australian Bureau of Statistics said the quarterly growth across all sectors had been primarily driven by wage increases for the private sector.

“Labour market pressures in the private sector combined with the largest Fair Work Commission award increase in more than a decade saw rises in both the size of average wage changes and the proportion of private sector jobs recording a wage change,” she said. Ms Marquardt said a significan­t contributi­on to wages growth this quarter came from jobs “paid by individual arrangemen­t”.

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