Labour Underutilisation in Metropolitan Labour Markets in Australia: Individual Characteristics, Personal Circumstances and Local Labour Markets

Author:

Baum Scott1,Bill Anthea2,Mitchell William2

Affiliation:

1. Urban Research Program, Griffith University, 170 Kessels Road, Nathan, Brisbane, Queensland, 4111, Australia,

2. Centre of Full Employment and Equity, University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia,

Abstract

There has been a growing awareness that the issue of labour market disadvantage is substantially greater than merely considering unemployment and the ability to find a job. There is an increasing literature that points to the advantages of considering a broader concept which accounts not only for those people who are traditionally unemployed, but also for individuals who are underemployed and those who are sub-unemployed or discouraged workers. Taking multidimensional survey and census data for Australian metropolitan regions, this paper applies a broad employability framework to an understanding of labour underutilisation which presents the risk of underutilisation as a function of individual characteristics, personal circumstances and the impact of local labour market characteristics. The analysis finds that the risk of labour underutilisation is associated with a range of individual characteristics and personal circumstances together with the characteristics of the metropolitan local labour market.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

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1. Underemployment and wage growth during COVID-19;New Zealand Economic Papers;2024-08-28

2. Youth Labor Underutilization in Australia Following the Global Financial Crisis;Research Anthology on Macroeconomics and the Achievement of Global Stability;2022-08-05

3. Career degradation in Australian cities: globalization, precarity and adversity;Regional Studies, Regional Science;2022-06-10

4. Employment Outcomes for Men and Women Following an Economic Downturn: Labour Underutilisation in Australia;The Indian Journal of Labour Economics;2022-03

5. Immigrants on the Slovak labour market: who is more resilient to the impacts of COVID-19?;Eastern Journal of European Studies;2022

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