Tel: 03 5224 2560
Welcome to Dimond Pony Trading Pty Ltd.!
关闭
Your current location: Home > News > News

Employment surges by 89,000 in April and unemployment rate holds steady at 4.1pc

Source:Dimond Pony Trading Pty Ltd. Pubdate:16-May-2025 Author:Dimond Pony Trading Pty Ltd. Viewed:

Employment surges by 89,000 in April and unemployment rate holds steady at 4.1pc

1.jpg
The Reserve Bank forecasts the unemployment rate to increase slightly this year, but stabilise a little above 4 per cent. (ABC News: Nic MacBean)

Australia's unemployment rate held steady in April, as 89,000 people found employment — much stronger jobs growth than had been forecast.

The unemployment rate remained at 4.1 per cent last month, the same level as in March, in seasonally adjusted terms.

The rise in employment was larger for females, up 65,000 (0.9 per cent), while male employment was up 24,000 (0.3 per cent).

Female employment growth was mainly in full-time workers, which rose 42,000 (1.1 per cent) in April. Female part-time workers rose by 23,000 (0.8 per cent).

The ABS data show employment has grown by 390,000 people over the year (+2.7 per cent), an annual growth rate that is much higher than the population growth rate for people aged 15 years and over (+2.1 per cent).

2.jpg

The strong growth in employment saw the employment-to-population ratio lift by 0.3 percentage points to 64.4 per cent in April, which is just below the record high of 64.5 per cent recorded in January.

With the addition of 6,000 officially unemployed people (actively looking for work), the labour force swelled by 95,000 people in April, lifting the participation rate by 0.3 percentage points to 67.1 per cent.

Low unemployment rate, falling inflation, and interest rate cuts

In trend terms (which looks through seasonal noise in the data) the unemployment rate was steady in April, at 4.1 per cent.

It's been sitting within a relatively narrow range of 3.9 per cent and 4.1 per cent for the past 17 months.

The low unemployment rate has coincided with falling inflation, with headline inflation falling from 4.1 per cent to 2.4 per cent (in annual terms) in the same period.

Economists say the strong jobs report is unlikely to prevent the Reserve Bank from cutting interest rates next week, but it could mean the RBA will be less aggressive with rate cuts later this year.

Strong employment gains, following a few months of weaker results, reminds us that the Australian job market remains healthy, said Callam Pickering, Asia Pacific economist at job site Indeed.

Forward-looking measures of labour demand, such as Indeed job postings, continue to suggest that labour demand remains quite strong, supporting employment growth, he said.

Tony Sycamore from IG said after the robust jobs report was released, the Australian interest rate market marginally reduced the probability of a 0.25 percentage point RBA rate cut next week from 90 per cent to about an 80 per cent chance.

He said markets were now only pricing in around 0.73 percentage points of RBA rate cuts between now and the end of this year too, which is significantly less than the 1.0 percentage point cut priced in on Monday morning.

3.jpg

ANZ economists Aaron Luk and Adelaide Timbrell said the resilient labour market, along with Wednesday's stronger wage data, may add to discussions about whether to cut or hold the cash rate next week.

They said the outsized surge in employment — by 89,000 people, against market expectations of 22,500 people — also suggested that the increase in jobs may be more noise than signal, adding to the volatility in employment numbers in 2025 so far.

They also said hours worked was flat last month, despite the strong growth in employment, and that's a more stable indicator of economic activity.

However, they still expected the RBA to cut rates by 0.25 percentage points next week.


https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-05-15/unemployment-rate-australia-april-2025/105295108

Copyright C 2009-2024 Dimond Pony Trading Pty Ltd. All Rights Reserved

Address: Suite 5, 1/73 Malop Street, Geelong VIC 3220 Email: admin@dimondpony.com