Job mobility rises over second year of pandemic: Australia

Job mobility rose to the highest level in a decade according to annual statistics released today by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

Bjorn Jarvis, head of Labour Statistics at the ABS, said: "In the 12 months to February 2022, 9.5 per cent of employed people changed their employer or business. This was the highest job mobility rate in a decade (since the year ending February 2012).

"Job mobility in Australia had generally been trending down for decades and reached a record low of 7.5 per cent during the first year of the pandemic.

"As the labour market has progressively recovered, we have seen an increase in job mobility, with 1.3 million people changing jobs during the second year of the pandemic. This was around 300,000 more people than the year before (970,000 in the year ending February 2021), and around 220,000 more than the year before the pandemic (1.1 million in the year ending February 2020).

"Some of the increase over the second year of the pandemic will be delayed or deferred job mobility from the first year."

Job mobility: Employed people who changed jobs during the year
Persons (%)Males (%)Females (%)
197217.417.417.3
1973
1974
1975
197615.716.514.2
1977
1978
197915.917.013.8
198013.614.312.5
198116.216.815.1
198216.617.215.7
198314.414.913.4
198413.714.212.9
198515.215.415.1
198616.816.716.9
198716.617.015.9
198817.918.417.1
198919.519.918.8
199017.517.717.4
199114.114.313.7
199212.012.211.9
1993
199411.511.311.6
1995
199612.812.613.1
1997
199810.210.210.3
1999
200011.711.911.4
2001
200211.211.011.4
2003
200410.911.310.4
2005
200611.611.611.7
2007
200811.511.711.4
2009
20108.89.08.6
2011
201210.510.810.2
20139.29.78.6
2014
20157.98.47.4
20168.08.37.6
20177.78.37.0
20188.18.67.5
20198.58.78.1
20208.18.47.8
20217.57.57.6
20229.59.110.0

Note: 2015 to 2022 data are available from Table 01 in the data downloads section of Job mobility

/ABS Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.