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AAP
AAP
Business
Poppy Johnston

Unemployment rate remains at 3.4 per cent

Australia's hot labour market has delivered another low unemployment rate. (Melanie Foster/AAP PHOTOS) (AAP)

The national jobless rate has stayed at 3.4 per cent, with 64,000 more people finding work in November.

A 66.8 per cent participation rate was recorded for the month of November, a 0.2 percentage point lift, to return to record highs first seen in the middle of the year.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics published its latest labour force figures on Thursday.

"With increases in both employment (up 64,000 people) and unemployment (up 7000 people), the unemployment rate remained steady at 3.4 per cent, while the participation rate increased to 66.8 per cent," said Bjorn Jarvis, head of labour statistics at the bureau.

For women, the participation rate returned to historic highs seen in June, rising 0.2 percentage points to 62.4 per cent.

The participation rate for men also edged up 0.2 percentage points to 71.3 per cent.

Underemployment also remained low, consistent with the strong jobs market, falling 0.1 percentage points to 5.8 per cent. This is 2.9 percentage points below the pre-pandemic rate.

Hours worked over the month dipped 0.4 per cent, coinciding with an increase in employees working fewer hours because of illness.

Another wave of COVID-19 washing through the community probably contributed to the decline.

Strong demand for labour throughout the pandemic recovery has kept the jobless rate in the "mid-threes" since June.

Although job vacancies and ads have come off their elevated peaks, another low jobless result was expected given the enduring heat in the jobs market.

However, 64,000 people finding work still came as a surprise, with the uptick about three times the average monthly rate of new jobs creation.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers said it was positive to see the unemployment rate so low, but wages were taking a long time to respond to the tight labour market.

"Due to a decade of deliberate wage stagnation under our predecessors and the rising cost of living, workers' real wages are still going backwards, which is why our plan to fight inflation and get wages moving again is so important," Dr Chalmers said.

KPMG chief economist Brendan Rynne said the healthy employment figures would support elevated spending because most Australians have a source of income.

He said pressure would be maintained on the central bank as it seeks to dampen demand in the economy and bring inflation back within its two to three per cent target range.

"This will ensure the Reserve Bank of Australia enters 2023 with a keen eye to maintaining the contractionary path for the cash rate," Dr Rynne said.

The tight labour market will also support wage growth, again bolstering the case for more rate hikes next year.

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