JOBSEEKERS MORE UPBEAT ABOUT FINDING WORK

JOBSEEKERS MORE UPBEAT ABOUT FINDING WORK

QUEENSLANDERS are increasingly confident about their chances of landing a new job, but still want to preserve their regular work.

The latest labour mobility index from recruitment group Randstad shows the national job market reversed its downward trend, rising two basis points to 102 in the March quarter compared to the previous period. It follows a sharp benchmark decline of 11 points in the previous three quarters.

The latest figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics show Queensland’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate jumped from 5.4 to 5.7 per cent.

Despite the minor February rise in unemployment, Randstad CEO Fred van der Tang describes the national 5.2 per cent jobless rate as comparatively low.

“(It) means the labour market is actually very tight,” he says in a written statement.

“To put it in perspective, the current unemployment rate in the UK right now is above 8 per cent, in the US it’s about the same and our neighbours in New Zealand have an unemployment rate of 6.3 per cent.”

He welcomes stabilising jobseeker confidence after an extended decline as good news for employers wanting to attract new talent in the next 12 months.

“It’s encouraging to see the downward slide has stabilised. It suggests there might be more confidence in the economy than some other economic data is indicating,” he says.

However, most workers exercise caution and prefer to remain in their current roles instead of exploring new career options. The index is still nine points lower than the previous corresponding period in 2011, when it peaked at 111 points.

“Mobility took a real hit last year, with uncertain overseas economic conditions sending shockwaves domestically. Understandably workers opted to bunker down in their current roles, rather than taking a chance on a new job,” says van der Tang.

There is still uncertainty looming over domestic and global economic conditions.

“Recent retrenchments in the finance and travel industries are also likely to have cast a shadow over the current labour market,” says van der Tang.

“While it will take time to rebuild the confidence and mobility levels to the heights they hit 12 months ago, we expect strong skills demand in Australia’s powerhouse industries like resources, agriculture, banking and IT to generate greater mobility as 2012 unfolds.”

Get our daily business news

Sign up to our free email news updates.

Please tick to verify that you are not a robot

 

Help us deliver quality journalism to you.
As a free and independent news site providing daily updates
during a period of unprecedented challenges for businesses everywhere
we call on your support

Naturally Good: Showcasing Australia’s natural and organic leaders
Partner Content
With just days to go until Naturally Good, Australia’s leading trade exhibition d...
Naturally Good
Advertisement

Related Stories

Spirit Super, CareSuper to merge into $45 billion fund

Spirit Super, CareSuper to merge into $45 billion fund

Consolidation continues in Australia's superannuation sector af...

“It was an easy decision”: Good Drinks sells gaming licenses for $4.9m to fund QLD growth

“It was an easy decision”: Good Drinks sells gaming licenses for $4.9m to fund QLD growth

In a decision described as easy by Good Drinks Australia (ASX: GDA)...

Redflow locks in $18m battery contract with California Energy Commission

Redflow locks in $18m battery contract with California Energy Commission

Brisbane-based clean energy storage company Redflow (ASX: RFX) has ...

Wax off, bio-coatings on: Earthodic raises $1.85m to make paper packaging stronger, more recyclable

Wax off, bio-coatings on: Earthodic raises $1.85m to make paper packaging stronger, more recyclable

If existing wax or plastic-coated packaging products are compromisi...