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Employment at decade high: ABS Email Print Normal font Large font August 7, 2007 - 3:14PM
Advertisement AdvertisementMore Australians have jobs than at any time in the past decade, they are working fewer hours and they are working more safely.
And according to Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) data, they are deserting trade unions and staging fewer strikes.
In the year to June 2006, Australia had a labour force of 10.59 million of which 10.064 million had either a full or part-time job.
While the workforce has grown, it is spending slightly less time on the job.
The ABS found the average hours worked by full-time employees is at its lowest level in 10 years with 40 hours a week having become the standard.
While most employment trends have experienced little change over the past decade, workplace relations has undergone a well-publicised overhaul.
In 1996, 31.1 per cent of Australian workers belonged to a trade union.
Last year that figure had dropped to 20.3 per cent.
The declining influence of the trade union movement is accompanied by a fall in the number of days lost to strikes.
Ten years ago, 114.1 days per 1,000 workers were spent on strike, compared with 21.6 days last year.
ABS data shows the Northern Territory to be the worst state or territory for industrial disputes, with a strike rate more than twice the national average.
The figures, however, don't necessarily show a relationship between trade union membership and industrial unrest.
Tasmania, where union membership is the highest in the country, lost only 4.2 days per 1,000 workers to strikes, less than half the rate of the next worst state.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/Business/Employment-at-decade-high-ABS/2007/08/07/1186252689243.html
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