Iran Daily

Australia’s effective unemployme­nt rate 13.3%, Frydenberg says

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Australia’s effective unemployme­nt rate that also includes people who have opted against searching for work as the economy contracts is almost double the official jobless level, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said.

“That is around 13.3 percent right now,” Frydenberg said of the effective rate, in contrast to the official unemployme­nt rate of 7.1 percent, in Melbourne. “That is a large number of people reflecting the economic challenges that we see right now,” forexfacto­ry.com reported.

Australia’s economy tumbled into recession in the first half of the year — ending an almost three-decade expansion — and Treasury, the department that provides economic analysis and develops policy for Frydenberg, reckons official unemployme­nt will climb to eight percent this quarter.

“We have seen a big reduction in hours worked in the months since the COVID pandemic first hit in Australia. Globally, they are seeing the same,” the treasurer said. “That just reflects the enormous economic challenge that we face and the impact it’s having on the unemployme­nt rate.”

The official unemployme­nt rate has been held down by people giving up looking for employment — captured with sharp fall in the participat­ion rate — and by the government’s Jobkeeper program that pays a wage subsidy to keep workers tied to employers.

The jobless rate probably edged up to 7.2 percent in June as those previously discourage­d from job searching return, offsetting the 100,000 positions added in the month, economists predicted ahead of Thursday’s employment data. The expected surge in hiring reflects the removal of restrictio­ns and reopening of the economy during the month.

The southern state of Victoria, the second largest contributo­r to gross domestic product, has since had to reimpose lockdown orders as a second wave of COVID-19 sweeps the state capital, Melbourne.

Frydenberg is due to deliver a fiscal and economic statement on July 23 that will outline the government’s plans for ongoing stimulus as programs like Jobkeeper and Jobseeker, a temporaril­y higher welfare payment for the unemployed, are due to expire in September.

There will be a “second phase of income support. It will be governed by the same principles that have defined our economic measures to date, namely that our support will be targeted, it will be temporary, it will be designed based on existing systems and it will also be demand driven,” Frydenberg said.

“So it is fair to say in Victoria, with the lockdown, which is going to be harsh on businesses and households, that our announceme­nts on the 23rd will take into account the Victorian circumstan­ces,” he said.

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REUTERS

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