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Research Note 33 1997-98

Do Official Figures Understate 'True' Unemployment?

Tony Kryger
Statistics Group
23 March 1998

Introduction

The official unemployment figures are those produced by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS). These figures conform with international standards as laid down by the International Labour Office of the International Labour Organisation (ILO). The Australian figures are thus consistent with those produced by several overseas countries. This said, however, it is also the case that ABS (and therefore ILO) labour force definitions are biased toward counting a person as employed rather than as unemployed.

Definitions

According to ABS definitions, the labour force category to which people belong is assessed on the basis of their activity during a specified period of one week (called the reference week). Intuitively, one might expect that a person would be classified as employed or unemployed on the basis of his or her major activity in the reference week. In other words, anyone who spent more than 50 per cent of their reference week unemployed should, on this basis, be classified as unemployed. A precedent for this kind of thinking is to be found in the way the ABS itself classifies an establishment (mine, factory, shop, etc.) to a particular industry class on the basis of its major activity.

Unlike the classification system for establishments, the ABS defines people as employed even if they spend as little as one hour of the reference week in employment and spend every other hour of the week actively seeking a job. Officially, the ABS defines an employed person as someone aged 15 years or over who, during a period of one week, worked for one hour or more for pay, profit, commission or payment in kind; or worked for one hour or more without pay in a family business or on a family farm. An unemployed person is defined as someone aged 15 years or over who, during a period of one week was not employed, and had actively looked for work in the previous four weeks and was available to start work.

Underemployment

Underemployment rates

Far from trying to conceal the true extent of unemployment, however, the ABS publishes separate figures on those persons working less than full-time hours (1-34 hours) who would prefer to work more hours. These persons are referred to as the underemployed. (Also included in the underemployed are full-time employed persons working less than 35 hours in the reference week for so-called economic reasons, i.e. stood down, on short time, or insufficient work.) By adding together the unemployed and underemployed one can arrive at a more comprehensive measure of excess labour capacity.

The number of underemployed persons in Australia during 1997, as identified by the ABS, averaged around 635 000. Of these, nearly 570 000 were part-time employed persons who would have preferred to work more hours. If these persons are classified by the number of hours which they did work, we find that around 80 000 worked 1-5 hours. In other words, the ABS Labour Force Survey counted as employed, 80 000 people who worked as little as 1-5 hours and who would have preferred to work more hours. If this number of persons was added to the unemployed then the average unemployment rate in 1997 would have climbed from 8.6 to 9.4 per cent.

An underemployment rate can be derived by expressing the number of underemployed persons as a proportion of the labour force. The chart above shows that the under-employment rate increased steadily, but slowly, from around 21/2 per cent in the late 1970s to about 4 per cent at the end of the 1980s. It then increased rapidly in the 1990s to peak at 7.3 per cent at the close of 1992. Though it decreased somewhat in the years that followed, the underemployment rate has been less inclined to move downward than has the unemployment rate.

While we have become used to an unemployment rate during the past three years of between 8 and 9 per cent (seasonally adjusted), that rate climbs to between 15 and 16 per cent when we add in the underemployed.

Discouraged Jobseekers

Arguably, one could also add discouraged workers to the measure of excess labour capacity. Discouraged workers are defined by the ABS as those persons who do not satisfy the strict definition of unemployment but who nevertheless want to work and were available for work but were not actively looking for work for reasons considered to indicate discouragement (e.g. considered to be too young or too old by employers, no jobs available in locality, etc.).

The table below has been constructed to show what the effect would be of adding to the unemployed both the under-employed and discouraged jobseekers. Thus in September 1997 (the latest period for which all figures are available) there were 793 000 unemployed, 556 000 underemployed and 118 000 discouraged jobseekers. This amounts to 1.5 million persons whose labour potential is either not being used or is underutilised in some way.

Marginally Attached to the Labour Force

Discouraged workers are part of a larger category of persons referred to as those marginally attached to the labour force. This category comprises persons not in the labour force but who want to work and were either a) actively looking for work but did not meet the strict criteria to be classified as unemployed or b) not actively looking for work but available to start work within four weeks. While most attention focuses on discouraged jobseekers, a case could be made for including all the marginally attached as part of society's unused labour capacity.

In September 1997 there were almost 900 000 persons marginally attached to the labour force, of which 70 per cent were female.

Excess Labour Capacity

Conclusion

Official, or ABS, labour force figures do not understate the level of unemployment. This is not to say that ABS figures are free of error. Errors may occur in any form of enumeration and the ABS has adopted stringent operating procedures to ensure that any errors made in collecting or processing the data are kept to a minimum. Some may argue that the ABS definition of unemployment is inadequate in that it does not fully measure excess labour capacity. As this Research Note has shown, however, there are several measures of excess capacity-unemployment, underemployment and discouraged jobseekers-for which figures are published by the ABS and which may be added together to provide a composite measure of excess labour capacity in the community.

 

 

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