Brendan Giles
  • About
Brendan Giles
/
Blog
/
Latest Blog Posts
/
March labour force

March labour force

Tags
Economic Updates
date
April 16, 2026

Australia's labour market held firm in March, giving the RBA plenty of runway to further increase rates to keep inflation anchored.

For March 2026:

πŸ‘·πŸ» Unemployment rate was 4.3% ( ↔️ )

πŸ‘·πŸ» 14,767,700 people were employed ( ⬆️ 17,900)

πŸ‘·πŸ» 656,300 people were unemployed ( ⬇️ 3,700)

πŸ‘·πŸ» Participation rate was 66.8% ( ⬇️ 0.1pts)

πŸ‘·πŸ» Underemployment rate was 5.9% ( ⬆️ 0.1pts)

πŸ‘·πŸ» Monthly hours worked were up 0.5% to 2,016 million

While the headline numbers were steady, the underlying composition still implies strength. Hours worked continues to grow faster than headcount (2.5% vs 1.8% annually). Average part-time hours per worker also lifted 1.4% in the month. This is a labour market where employers are extracting more labour from a broadly steady workforce, not one softening under pressure.

This gives the RBA some wiggle room to keep hiking into the petrol-driven inflation pulse without the risk of breaking the labour market. A increase in May, Juny, and August is now clearly on the cards and gives the RBA a good chance to keep inflation expectations anchored if the fuel crisis doesn’t deepen.