Thu. Oct 3rd, 2024
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Treasurer Jim Chalmers says the federal government’s employment white paper is “ambitious”. I’m not convinced.

A clearly ambitious statement would have specified a target for unemployment, ideally one that was a bit of a stretch.

The Keating Labor government’s Working Nation statement did that in 1994. Released at a time when unemployment was almost 10 per cent, it specified a target unemployment rate of 5 per cent – an ambition that served as a beacon for decades.

That target certainly needs to be updated. Unemployment is now well below 5 per cent, meaning “full employment” is now much less than 5 per cent. Yet the Albanese government has passed up a historic opportunity to say how much less, which it could have done by setting its own target.

Jim Chalmers pointing during a press conference.
Jim Chalmers has released an employment White Paper but it doesn’t include an unemployment target.(ABC News: Luke Stephenson)

Setting our sights below 5 per cent

The white paper released on Monday defines full employment as a state in which “everyone who wants a job should be able to find one without searching for too long”. That means our unemployment target ought to be somewhere between zero and 5 per cent.

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