Townsville Bulletin

Private sector loses out

Lockdowns blamed for loss of 300k jobs, while public service surges

- SOPHIE ELSWORTH

THE creation of taxpayerfu­nded jobs continues to increase while hundreds of thousands of private sector workers are left jobless, new figures reveal.

Latest Australian Bureau of Statistics data analysed by think tank the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) showed between March and November about 25,800 public sector jobs were created. At the same time, more than 300,000 private sector jobs were lost.

And younger workers are among the hardest hit – employment for workers aged between 15 and 34 fell by 158,000 while for those aged 35 and over it rose by 20,000.

The IPA’S research report, “Not in this together: An analysis of the economic and social impact of COVID-19 lockdowns”, showed low-income earners, young Australian­s and those who are in the private sector were the hardest hit.

The IPA’S research fellow Kurt Wallace said the disproport­ionate job losses were largely a result of lockdown measures imposed on workers.

“The lockdowns accelerate­d the deep divide we have in our country between those on higher incomes and in the public sector versus those on lower incomes and working in the private sector, particular­ly younger Australian­s,” he said.

Latest figures show Australia’s gross domestic product rose by 3.1 per cent over the December quarter – a strong sign the economy is improving.

But Small Business Australia’s executive director Bill Lang said the job loss figures showed “we’re not all in it together”. “If you are a public servant or an employee of a large corporatio­n in many cases the pandemic has been great for you financiall­y, you can work from home and don’t have to deal with traffic and fear of losing your job,” he said.

“It’s been the private sector and particular­ly small and medium-sized businesses are the ones that have suffered the biggest financial impacts.”

Mr Lang said when JobKeeper ends later this month many on these support measures “will be unemployed in four weeks’ time”. “There will be no work for them to do and for those business owners who are going to fight to survive they will provide as much of the labour as they can,” he said.

The report also showed in the June and September quarters private sector wages fell by $8.3bn while public sector wages rose by $2.75bn.

There was also an increase of 194,500 jobs for those earning more than $1800 per week.

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