Women have propelled Australian employment growth

Original article by Roy Morgan Research
Market Research Update – Page: Online : 23-Oct-17

Roy Morgan Research’s analysis of long-running trends in the Australian labour market by gender shows that strong increases in employment this century have been driven by large increases in both full-time and part-time employment for both women and men. However, although these increases have been shared between both genders, the increasing number of women joining the workforce has led to larger overall gains for women across overall employment, full-time employment, and also part-time employment. Roy Morgan Research CEO Michele Levine says the Australian workforce is undergoing generational change, with women entering the workforce in increasing numbers while men are driving the trend towards increasing part-time employment.

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ROY MORGAN RESEARCH LIMITED

Gender parity still lacking in Australia’s workforce

Original article by Roy Morgan Research
Market Research Update – Page: Online : 8-Mar-16

A Roy Morgan Single Source survey has found that 54.5 per cent of Australian women were employed in the year to January 2016, compared with 52.5 per cent in the year to January 2006. The proportion of women employed part-time has risen from 25.7 per cent to 26.2 per cent over this period, and the proportion of women employed full-time has increased from 26.8 per cent to 28.3 per cent. In contrast, the proportion of employed men has fallen from 66.8 per cent to 65.6 per cent, driven by a decrease (from 54.6 per cent to 51.0 per cent) in those working full-time. Meanwhile, 6.5 per cent of Australian men and 3.1 per cent of women work full-time in jobs that fall under the "Professionals" category, while 12.2 per cent of men and 6.5 per cent of women hold managerial roles. The survey also shows that women tend to earn less than their male colleagues, except in lower salary echelons.

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ROY MORGAN RESEARCH LIMITED

Aussies have how much annual leave accrued?!

Original article by Roy Morgan Research
Market Research Update – Page: Online : 2-Jun-15

A Roy Morgan Single Source survey has found that Australians aged 14+ who are in full-time employment have a total of 123,510,000 days of annual leave accrued. This is an average of just under 21 days’ leave each. Male workers account for 69% (85,357,000 days) of total leave owed, or an average of 22 days each, while female workers have 38,153,000 days of accrued annual leave, with the individual average being 18 days. Meanwhile, people in Wholesaling (25 days), Public Administration and Defence (24 days), Agriculture (24 days) and Transport and Storage (24 days) are especially likely to have accumulated substantial leave balances.

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ROY MORGAN RESEARCH LIMITED