This month the Productivity Commission released a report (or
more accurately, a supplement to its annual report) on ‘structural change’ in
Australia’s economy over the past decade. The phenomenon of structural change
has gotten some more notice here over the past few years, particularly from the
Reserve
Bank of Australia, with production in Australia shifting towards the mining
industry.
But why do we care? Well, as the Commission’s report says
there are benefits and costs to us from this type of change. On the plus side,
resources should be flowing towards the areas of the economy where they are of
highest use, therefore raising the value of what Australia produces. This
includes workers moving to where they are of highest use, although this concept
is often not all that palatable given the human element involved. Which brings
us to the costs of structural change – there are costs from moving resources
around, including workers, and some of these will find themselves unemployed,
at least in the short-term.
Of course changes like this go on constantly, so by
structural change we mean something bigger and more lasting than, say, a local
clothes shop closing down, as much as that might initially suck for the shop’s
owner and staff. Without having an exact definition, we can think of it as
something like, for example, one sector increasing its share of Australia’s
economic activity by 5 percentage points over several years, while another
contracts by the same amount. The RBA showed a few years back, using
‘structural change indices’, that the rate of structural change appeared to
have increased in recent years, although by how much depends on which economic
variable you look at (i.e. output, employment or investment), and there had
been increases of similar magnitude before.
In terms of employment, the Productivity Commission report
shows that the recent boom in natural resources in Australia ‘has not been
associated with an unprecedented rate of structural change in employment’ (p.
69). Employment has shifted from agriculture and manufacturing towards mining,
and also the services sector, which is perhaps less well-known given that you
do not tend to hear about a ‘services boom’ in Australia. These trends though
have been going on for some time, as the Commission’s report illustrates, and
some of them are not unique to Australia – the shift from manufacturing to
services for example is common among the most-developed countries. Some of
these service jobs will be in relatively low-paying sectors such as retail and
hospitality, but others will be in relatively high-paying sectors such as
professional services.
Across states, the Commission's report shows that the
redistribution of employment is also not at an unprecedented level. The
redistribution of employment across states is typically lower than that across
sectors; which is interesting, and may or may not be surprising depending on
whether you think people are more likely to move from manufacturing to services
than from, say, Victoria to Queensland. The report concludes there is evidence
that disparities in unemployment across regions have decreased during the 2000s
(though they widened slightly between 2008 and 2012).
The report has quite a large section on recent trends in labour adjustments and mobility. Essentially, these trends are what you would expect given the shifts in overall employment between sectors – e.g. manufacturing is attracting fewer new workers.
Articles and reports on structural change in Australia often
seem like they should come with a ‘DON’T PANIC’ sticker on them. The RBA said earlier this year
that monetary policy cannot and should not prevent structural change from
occurring. The Productivity Commission report gives much the same impression of
inevitability. This is not to say that such change should be blindly accepted,
but that the relative rise and fall of various sectors has happened before, and
will happen again.
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