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Research Note 46 1997-98

Estimated Unemployment Rates by Electorate, December Quarter 1997

Andrew Kopras & Tony Kryger
Statistics Group
23 June 1998


Introduction

The Statistics Group of the Department of the Parliamentary Library has been compiling unemployment rate statistics by electorate since March quarter 1996. These statistics are derived from small area labour market estimates produced by the Department of Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs (DEETYA). DEETYA estimates are in turn based on Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) labour force survey and population data and Department of Social Security figures.

The information in this Research Note refers to the Electoral Divisions as they will be at the next election, that is following the 1997 redistributions in Western Australia, Queensland and the ACT. This means that for these States and the ACT the party shown is notional party only.

Methodology

Each quarter DEETYA produces unemployment and labour force estimates for around 700 Statistical Local Areas (SLAs). Using these as the basic building blocks, it is possible to construct an unemployment rate estimate for each electorate in Australia. DEETYA unemployment and labour force estimates at the state level are exactly equal to the corresponding ABS estimates.

To construct an unemployment rate estimate for an Australian electorate it is first necessary to allocate SLAs to electorates. If an SLA falls wholly within an electorate there is no problem. If an SLA overlaps two or more electorates however, the unemployment and labour force estimates for that SLA have to be apportioned between electorates. From the Census it is known how the population of overlapping SLAs is distributed between electorates and this proportion is used to distribute unemployment and labour force totals. It is then a matter of aggregating the data for SLAs and part SLAs within electorates and calculating an overall unemployment rate for each electorate.

The problem of SLAs that overlap two or more electorates and the crude method of dealing with this problem (using population data as the basis for apportioning unemployment and labour force totals between electorates) means that unemployment rates by electorate are approximations only and therefore should be treated with caution.

Results

  • Unemployment rates for the December quarter 1997 ranged from a low of 1.6 per cent in Bradfield (NSW) to a high of 15.8 per cent in Bonython (SA). The average unemployment rate for all Australia was 8.0 per cent.
  • There is a very definite skewing of ALP and National Party seats toward the upper end of the unemployment rate spectrum. For example, a quarter of all seats have an unemployment rate of 10.5 per cent or more. Of these, 16 seats are held by the ALP, 15 by the Liberal Party and 6 by the National Party (or 33, 19 and 33 per cent of all seats held by the respective parties). At the opposite end of the spectrum, a quarter of all seats have an unemployment rate of 6.1 per cent or less. Of these, only 5 seats are held by the ALP (10 per cent of all ALP seats), 27 by the Liberal Party (35 per cent of all Liberal Party seats), only one seat is held by the National Party and 4 seats are held by Independents.
  • Three quarters of all Western Australian seats have unemployment rates that are below the national average. This contrasts with Tasmania in which there are no seats with an unemployment rate below the national average. In between are New South Wales and Victoria (majority of seats below the average) and Queensland and South Australia (majority of seats above the average).

Electorial Divisions ranked by the Estimated Unemployment Rate (per cent) December 1997

 

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