Average weekly ordinary time earnings for full-time adults was $1,748 in November 2021, up 2.1 per cent ($37) over the year, according to new seasonally adjusted figures released today by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).
Bjorn Jarvis, head of Labour Statistics at the ABS, said: “Following relatively large fluctuations in average earnings during the pandemic, the 2.1 per cent change in average earnings over 2021 was more consistent with underlying wage growth from the Wage Price Index released yesterday, at 2.3 per cent.”
The latest data is for mid-November, which was after the labour market had recovered from most of the Delta period impacts and before the emergence of the Omicron variant.
“The six-monthly increase of 0.6 per cent, between May and November 2021, followed a larger increase of 1.5 per cent before that, highlighting the extent of compositional changes in employment and hours through the second half of 2021. Throughout 2021, full-time jobs were still progressively returning or reverting back to full-time hours in some lower paying industries, like Accommodation and food services.
“There was also some upward pressure on average full-time earnings from higher paying industries over the last six months, including in Construction, Information media and telecommunications, and Financial and insurance services,” Mr Jarvis said.
Workers in the Mining industry remained the highest paid on average, at $2,656 per week for full-time workers, followed by those in Information media and telecommunications, at $2,178, and Financial and insurance services ($2,116).
The lowest paid workers on average were in the Accommodation and food services ($1,219) and Retail trade ($1,314) industries.
Industry | Persons ($) | Males ($) | Females ($) |
---|---|---|---|
Mining | 2,656.30 | 2,724.90 | 2,306.30 |
Information media & telecommunications | 2,178.40 | 2,310.20 | 1,941.00 |
Financial & insurance services | 2,116.20 | 2,333.30 | 1,852.80 |
Professional, scientific & technical services | 2,051.40 | 2,266.90 | 1,713.50 |
Electricity, gas, water & waste services | 1,970.80 | 2,007.60 | 1,850.80 |
Public administration & safety | 1,890.90 | 1,962.80 | 1,796.20 |
Education & training | 1,871.10 | 2,016.80 | 1,797.20 |
Construction | 1,734.10 | 1,776.20 | 1,468.00 |
Health care & social assistance | 1,691.40 | 1,989.50 | 1,563.40 |
Transport, postal & warehousing | 1,690.80 | 1,737.60 | 1,497.70 |
Wholesale trade | 1,638.20 | 1,720.40 | 1,441.60 |
Rental, hiring & real estate services | 1,581.80 | 1,734.30 | 1,396.00 |
Manufacturing | 1,557.10 | 1,601.50 | 1,394.90 |
Arts & recreation services | 1,543.50 | 1,593.50 | 1,456.00 |
Administrative & support services | 1,520.30 | 1,598.10 | 1,378.30 |
Other services | 1,328.00 | 1,344.70 | 1,296.70 |
Retail trade | 1,314.40 | 1,373.80 | 1,231.60 |
Accommodation & food services | 1,218.80 | 1,276.10 | 1,133.10 |
Over the six months, average weekly ordinary time earnings for women working full-time rose by 1.0 per cent (to $1,591), which was higher than for men (up 0.5 per cent to $1,846).
“The gap in the headline measures of average weekly full-time earnings for women and men narrowed from 14.2 per cent in May 2021 to 13.8 per cent in November 2021. The only time it was lower than this was in November 2020,” Mr Jarvis said.
“The gap in average full-time earnings was highest in the Professional, scientific & technical services industry and lowest in the group of industries that make up ‘Other services’.”
This latest gender earnings data follows last month’s release of , which showed men earned more than women in all occupation groups, with the gap ranging between 10 and 19 per cent.
Average weekly ordinary time earnings for full-time workers continued to be highest in the Australian Capital Territory ($1,981) and Western Australia ($1,896) and remained lowest in Tasmania ($1,542) and South Australia ($1,591).
The ABS would like to thank businesses in Australia for their continued support in responding to our surveys during these challenging times.