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4 years ago

Australian unemployment hits 22-year high

File photo (collected)
File photo (collected)

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The number of unemployed Australians actively looking for work has surpassed 1.0 million for the first time.

According to data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), which is in Canberra, on Thursday the unemployment rate was 7.5 per cent in July - up from 7.4 percent in June - the highest level since November 1998.

However, there were signs of Australia's economy beginning to recover from the coronavirus crisis, reports Xinhua.

The number of people working increased by 114,700 from June and the number of hours worked increased 1.3 per cent.

The increase in unemployment was driven by the number of people actively looking for work surpassing 1 million for the first time in recorded history. The ABS only considers a person unemployed if they are actively looking for work.

The percentage of people employed in Australia rose to 59.8 per cent compared to a low of 58.2 per cent in May.

"The July figures indicate that employment had recovered by 343,000 people and hours worked had also recovered 5.5 per cent since May," Bjorn Jarvis, the head of Labour Statistics at the ABS, said in a media release.

"Employment remained over half a million people lower than seen in March, while hours worked remained 5.5 per cent lower."

The unemployment rate is expected to hit a peak of 10 per cent as a result of strict lockdown measures reinstated to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in Victoria.

Michaelia Cash, the minister for employment, said on Thursday that the Victorian lockdown would cost the economy "billions and billions" of dollars.

"Every job loss as a result of COVID-19 is devastating, and that is why the Morrison government has put in place a suite of measures to help employers and employees to get through this crisis," she said.

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