Job vacancies fall further in February but remain high

There were 364,000 job vacancies in February 2024, down 24,000 from November, according to new figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

Bjorn Jarvis, ABS head of labour statistics, said: “The number of job vacancies fell by 6.1 per cent between November 2023 and February 2024.

“The drop in February followed a small fall of 0.8 per cent in November 2023 and was the seventh quarterly drop in a row.

“Job vacancies are now 23.5 per cent lower than they were at their peak in May 2022. However, they remain well above the pre-COVID-19 pandemic level and are still 59.8 per cent higher than February 2020, or around 136,000 more vacancies.

“The also showed that job vacancies continue to make up a much higher proportion of jobs in the labour market than we would typically see. In the December quarter 2023, they were 2.4 per cent of all jobs, compared with around 1.6 per cent during 2019.”

Job vacancies, seasonally adjusted

Job vacancies (‘000)
Feb-8040.6
May-8036.7
Aug-8037.5
Nov-8038.7
Feb-8137.4
May-8144.0
Aug-8144.5
Nov-8141.7
Feb-8237.3
May-8230.3
Aug-8226.8
Nov-8230.3
Feb-8329.7
May-8332.4
Aug-8333.6
Nov-8336.3
Feb-8444.6
May-8440.3
Aug-8448.5
Nov-8449.8
Feb-8560.4
May-8568.6
Aug-8567.2
Nov-8566.2
Feb-8664.8
May-8666.1
Aug-8661.1
Nov-8666.3
Feb-8769.5
May-8766.9
Aug-8770.1
Nov-8766.9
Feb-8870.2
May-8874.4
Aug-8880.8
Nov-8885.1
Feb-8984.7
May-8993.7
Aug-8976.6
Nov-8979.2
Feb-9071.9
May-9064.0
Aug-9056.7
Nov-9041.6
Feb-9133.8
May-9131.6
Aug-9129.8
Nov-9130.9
Feb-9233.3
May-9231.9
Aug-9233.0
Nov-9236.9
Feb-9337.0
May-9342.0
Aug-9346.2
Nov-9348.5
Feb-9457.6
May-9469.5
Aug-9482.2
Nov-9485.6
Feb-9572.7
May-9577.3
Aug-9574.6
Nov-9572.5
Feb-9681.0
May-9676.7
Aug-9677.5
Nov-9682.5
Feb-9781.3
May-9782.8
Aug-9784.9
Nov-9790.4
Feb-9898.3
May-98104.0
Aug-9889.8
Nov-98102.0
Feb-9987.2
May-99100.2
Aug-99106.9
Nov-99109.6
Feb-00118.1
May-00115.9
Aug-00114.4
Nov-00114.8
Feb-0199.7
May-0194.0
Aug-0190.2
Nov-0188.5
Feb-0290.5
May-0296.2
Aug-02103.0
Nov-0297.6
Feb-03109.7
May-03104.6
Aug-03104.1
Nov-03107.5
Feb-04103.8
May-04127.1
Aug-04124.6
Nov-04139.2
Feb-05146.2
May-05140.9
Aug-05139.0
Nov-05134.1
Feb-06144.3
May-06154.1
Aug-06154.9
Nov-06162.1
Feb-07160.8
May-07168.6
Aug-07173.3
Nov-07183.3
Feb-08178.2
May-08184.5
Aug-08na
Nov-08na
Feb-09na
May-09na
Aug-09na
Nov-09148.9
Feb-10168.4
May-10170.3
Aug-10178.6
Nov-10191.1
Feb-11189.4
May-11187.3
Aug-11183.4
Nov-11179.3
Feb-12181.8
May-12178.1
Aug-12175.3
Nov-12164.8
Feb-13149.8
May-13143.5
Aug-13140.6
Nov-13138.9
Feb-14143.2
May-14147.4
Aug-14146.6
Nov-14149.7
Feb-15151.9
May-15157.9
Aug-15161.5
Nov-15167.4
Feb-16172.2
May-16171.4
Aug-16177.1
Nov-16182.4
Feb-17185.1
May-17185.9
Aug-17200.0
Nov-17205.1
Feb-18213.1
May-18223.6
Aug-18226.9
Nov-18232.4
Feb-19232.6
May-19227.3
Aug-19221.5
Nov-19230.6
Feb-20227.7
May-20128.5
Aug-20202.7
Nov-20260.1
Feb-21288.7
May-21367.4
Aug-21326.8
Nov-21407.2
Feb-22424.9
May-22475.4
Aug-22459.9
Nov-22453.1
Feb-23442.3
May-23426.2
Aug-23390.4
Nov-23387.4
Feb-24363.8

The Job Vacancies Survey was suspended between August 2008 to August 2009 (inclusive).

The decline in job vacancies was seen across many industries. The strongest quarterly percentage falls were in Arts and recreation services (-33.2 per cent) and Public administration and safety (-20.2 per cent).

There were some industries that recorded growth in job vacancies over the quarter. The strongest percentage rises were in Rental, hiring and real estate (20.7 per cent) and Financial and insurance services (17.9 per cent).

Job vacancies in many industries remained high compared with pre-pandemic levels. This continued to be particularly pronounced in customer-facing industries, including Arts and recreation services, and Accommodation and food services.

Job vacancies, change from February 2020 to February 2024, industry, original

IndustryChange from before COVID-19 (%)
Arts and recreation services143.1
Accommodation and food services138.1
Health care and social assistance118.4
Electricity, gas, water and waste services117.9
Education and training102.2
Manufacturing90.5
Rental, hiring and real estate services79.7
Retail trade69.8
Construction67.8
Mining63.1
Public administration and safety43.3
Transport, postal and warehousing34.4
Other services33.5
Professional, scientific and technical services31.6
Wholesale trade27.9
Information media and telecommunications4.7
Financial and insurance services-1.6
Administrative and support services-3.7

Job vacancies dropped by 6.1 per cent over the three months to February in both the public (-3,000) and private sectors (-21,000).

There were also falls in job vacancies in most states and territories over the same time. Queensland saw the largest percentage drop (-11.1 per cent) followed by New South Wales (-10.0 per cent). The largest rise was in South Australia (8.0 per cent).

The ABS would like to thank businesses in Australia for their continued support in responding to our surveys.

/ABS Public Release. View in full .