What's new in statistics . . . July


This month focuses on the following topics: population statistics, deaths in custody and the Australian economy.

Forthcoming releases

If you are interested in any of the forthcoming releases or datasets, please contact the Parliamentary Library to discuss in more detail.

 

 

Statistical reports

Release date

JSA (a)

Nowcast of Employment by Region and Occupation, June 2023

5 July

ANZ

ANZ Job Advertisement, June 2023

3 July

ABS

Lending Indicators, May 2023

3 July

ABS

Building Approvals, May 2023

3 July

AIHW

COVID-19 linked data set: Linkage results (new)

5 July

ABS

Retail Trade, May 2023

5 July

ABS

International Trade in Goods and Services, May 2023

6 July

AIHW

Housing Affordability Update

7 July

AIHW

Housing Assistance in Australia, 2023

7 July

ABS

Barriers and Incentives to Labour Force Participation, 2020–21

7 July

ABS

Methodological News, June 2023

7 July

ABS

Microdata: Barriers and Incentives to Labour Force Participation, March 2023

7 July

ABS

Building Approvals, May 2023

10 July

ABS

Monthly Business Turnover Indicator, May 2023

10 July

AIHW

Deaths in Australia Update (incl. GRIM books, MORT books)

11 July

AIHW

How Long can Australians Live? (new)

11 July

ABS

Monthly Household Spending Indicator, May 2023

11 July

ABS

Overseas Arrivals and Departures, May 2023

12 July

ABS

Building Activity, March 2023

12 July

ABS

Weekly Payroll Jobs and Wages in Australia, Jun 2023

13 July

ABS

Labour Force, June 2023

20 July

ABS

Australian Statistical Geography Standard (ASGS) Edition 3, 2021–26

25 July

ABS

Consumer Price Index, June Quarter 2023

26 July

ABS

Monthly Consumer Price Index Indicator, June 2023

26 July

ABS

International Trade Price Indexes, June 2023

27 July

ABS

Labour Force (Detailed), June 2023

27 July

ABS

Producer Price Indexes, June 2023

28 July

ABS

Retail Trade, June 2023

28 July

ABS

Microdata: Longitudinal Labour Force, 1982–2023

28 July

(a) Jobs and Skills Australia (JSA). Note: Release dates may be subject to change without notice.

After the latest key economic statistics? Visit the Parliamentary Library’s Key Economic and Social Indicators Dashboard.

Recent reports

National, State and Territory Population (ABS)

The ABS released the latest population statistics on 15 June, reflecting the estimated residential population as at 31 December 2022. In summary:

  • Australia’s population was 26,268,359—an increase of 496,756 people (1.9%) from the previous year.
  • All states and territories had positive population growth over the 2022 calendar year. Western Australia had the fastest growth rate (2.3%) and Tasmania had the slowest rate (0.5%).

Population growth is comprised of natural increase (births minus deaths) and net overseas migration (migration arrivals minus migration departures).

  • There were 619,600 overseas migration arrivals and 232,600 departures, resulting in a net migration increase of 387,000 people.
  • Natural increase was 109,800 people, 23.4% less than the previous year. There were 300,700 births (4.6% decrease) and 190,900 deaths (11.1% increase) registered during this time, with COVID-19 mortality reported as the main contributor.

Additional report: 2023-24 Budget National, State and Territory Population Projections (Centre for Population)

 

Deaths in Custody in Australia: Real-time Dashboard (Australian Institute of Criminology)

The National Deaths in Custody Program (NDICP) has monitored the extent and nature of deaths occurring in prison, police custody and youth detention since 1980. The Australian Institute of Criminology established the NDICP in 1992 in response to recommendation 41 by the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody. Deaths in custody are now recorded in real-time and presented in a dashboard, structured monthly and quarterly.

 

Article: 12 things that happened in the Australian economy during the March quarter (ABS)

The 12 ‘things that happened’ listed by the ABS include:

  • Even with reduced discretionary spending, households only saved 3.7% of their income during the March quarter 2023. This was the lowest proportion of household income being saved since June quarter 2008. Interest paid on mortgages grew 11.5% during the quarter. The amount of money spent servicing mortgages more than doubled in the past year.
  • Fewer new houses were built, with construction of new dwellings falling 1.3%. Bottlenecks in labour and materials supplies began to ease, though remained tight. The average time taken to build a house rose to about 9 months, up from about 6 months before the pandemic.

Additional reports

Article: CPI International Comparisons (ABS)

  • This article discusses key differences in how Australia and selected countries, namely New Zealand, the United States, the United Kingdom and Canada, as well as the European Union, measure CPI inflation. A focus of the article is whether owner-occupied housing costs are included in the CPI measure and justifications behind these differences.

Report: Children and the Gender Earning Gap (Treasury)

  • In this paper the authors examine the impact of children on the gender earnings gap in Australia. The authors also identify the motherhood penalty in Australia up to a decade following the arrival of the first child, and compare this to international estimates. The report focuses on labour market outcomes rather than measures of life satisfaction, health and wellbeing.

Report: Agricultural outlook (Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry)

  • The Agricultural Commodities Report forecasts the value, volume and price of Australia's agricultural production and exports. Underpinning these forecasts is the ABARES outlook for global commodity prices, demand and supply.

Interested in finding out what the latest statistics are telling us about the Australian economy and population? Each month the Parliamentary Library publishes a Flag Post article listing new reports on a wide variety of topics. The list includes important upcoming ABS releases and other research organisations and government departments.

FlagPost

Flagpost is a blog on current issues of interest to members of the Australian Parliament

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