6224.0.55.001 - Labour Force, Australia: Labour Force Status and Other Characteristics of Families - Electronic Delivery, Jun 2006  
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 20/07/2006   
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File Contents
FA4.srd contains data for Australia.

Classifications

Labour force status of parents (husband,
partner, head, wife)
Employed Full Time, Employed Part Time, Unemployed looking for full-time work, Unemployed looking for part-time work, Not in the Labour Force, Participation rate, Unemployment rate
MonthJune each year from 1994
Age of husband or head15-24, 25-34, 35-44, 45-54, 55+
Age of wife15-24, 25-34, 35-44, 45-54, 55+
Family Type - couple and lone parent by sexOpposite sex couple with dependents; Opposite sex couple without dependents; Same sex couple with dependents; Same sex couple without dependents; One parent family with male parent; One parent family with female parent
Age group of youngest child0-4, 5-9, 10-14, 15-24
Age group of dependent childrenFamilies with dependents
0-9 only
0-4 only
5-9 only
0-4 and 5-9
10-14 only
15-24 only
0-9 and 10-14
0-4 and 10-14
0-4, 5-9 and 10-14
5-9 and 10-14
10-14 and 15-24
Other
Families without dependents


Standard Errors
The estimates in this data file are from a sample survey and may be subject to high standard errors. To annotate an item with a standard error of 25% or more, in SuperTABLE, right click in the centre of the table, select annotate cells - standard annotations, and select 'Annotate RSE cut-off values'. See the SuperTABLE reference manual for more information (available from Space-Time Research - see link above).

Additional information on how standard errors for LFS estimates are produced is available in Information Paper: Labour Force Survey Standard Errors (cat. no. 6298.0). The attached document (free download) also provides the tables to allow the annotation of historical estimates with a standard error of 25% or more.



Explanatory Information
Explanatory Information about the Labour Force Survey and associated products, including a glossary of terms used and links to related publications, can be found at Explanatory Notes