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INTRODUCTION
MARGINAL ATTACHMENT TO THE LABOUR FORCE 7.5 The international guidelines (ILO 1982) suggest that, where the standard definition of employment is used, countries develop classifications of persons not in the labour force according to the relative strength of attachment to the labour market. The ILO, in its manual Surveys of Economically Active Population, Employment, Unemployment and Underemployment, states that persons marginally attached to the labour force are those not economically active under the standard definitions of employment and unemployment, but who, following a change in one of the standard definitions (of employment or unemployment), would be reclassified as economically active. Discouraged workers 7.6 The guidelines recognise that, though not precise in concept (nor defined in the international guidelines), the term 'discouraged worker' generally refers to people who want a job and are currently available for work but have given up any active job search because they believe they cannot find a job. Discouraged workers are a small component of the marginally attached. DEFINITIONS USED IN ABS SURVEYS 7.7 The ABS produces estimates of persons not in the labour force in a number of household surveys. The definition used is consistent with the concepts outlined above except for persons younger than 15 years of age who are generally excluded from ABS measures of labour force status, and for whom separate estimates are available when required. Persons not in the labour force are therefore generally defined in ABS household collections as 'persons aged 15 years and over who were neither employed nor unemployed'. Those not in the labour force include people who were:
7.9 Estimates of persons not in the labour force produced from the reduced questionnaire module (used in most Special Social Surveys) differ from those produced from the Labour Force Survey. Estimates produced from the reduced questionnaire module are higher than those produced from the Labour Force Survey. This results from differences in the treatment of certain categories of persons:
7.10 The self-enumerated questionnaire module (used in the Census of Population and Housing) also produces different estimates of persons not in the labour force when compared to the Labour Force Survey. Some differences result from the shortened set of questions, which cannot determine labour force status as precisely as the Labour Force Survey. Other differences result from the self-enumeration nature of the questions and the inevitable differences in interpretation across respondents. As a result, estimates of persons not in the labour force from the self-enumerated questionnaire module are best used as explanatory or classificatory variables to explain other phenomena, rather than for detailed analysis of the labour force itself. MARGINAL ATTACHMENT TO THE LABOUR FORCE, DISCOURAGED JOB SEEKERS 7.11 Measures of persons marginally attached to the labour force and discouraged job seekers are collected by the ABS annually in a supplementary survey to the Labour Force Survey, the Persons Not In the Labour Force Survey. Definitions used in this survey are outlined below. Marginal attachment 7.12 Persons with marginal attachment to the labour force comprise those persons who are not in the labour force, who wanted to work, and:
7.13 This definition is consistent with that suggested by the international guidelines, and involves relaxing the criteria used to determine unemployment in the Labour Force Survey as follows:
Discouraged job seekers 7.14 Discouraged job seekers are defined as persons with marginal attachment to the labour force who wanted to work and were available to start work within the next four weeks, but whose main reason for not actively looking for work was that they believed they would not find a job for any of the following reasons:
This definition of discouraged job seekers is consistent with the definition of discouraged workers outlined in international guidelines. 7.15 Diagram 7.1 illustrates the concepts of not in the labour force, unemployed, marginally attached, and discouraged job seekers, as measured in the Persons Not In the Labour Force Survey. 7.1 CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK: PERSONS NOT IN THE LABOUR FORCE DATA SOURCES 7.16 Estimates of persons not in the labour force are available from:
7.17 The Labour Force Survey is the official source for Australian employment and unemployment statistics and defines persons not in the labour force according to the definitions outlined above, using the full questionnaire module. In the survey, persons not in the labour force are further classified as:
7.18 Estimates of reason for inactivity, marginal attachment and discouraged job seekers are impractical to collect in the regular labour force survey, on the grounds of cost, time and respondent burden. These topics are therefore measured in an annual supplement to the Labour Force Survey, as noted below. Notwithstanding this, the Labour Force Survey produces estimates, on a quarterly frequency, of the number of marginally attached persons who had actively looked for work, were not available to start work in the reference week, but were available to start within four weeks. For more details on the content and methodology of the Labour Force Survey refer to Chapter 19. SUPPLEMENTARY SURVEY: PERSONS NOT IN THE LABOUR FORCE 7.19 The supplement to the Labour Force Survey, the Persons Not In the Labour Force Survey is the primary source for detailed information on persons not in the labour force. Persons not in the labour force are defined as for the Labour Force Survey, but the scope of the survey is restricted to persons aged 15-69 years. The survey produces estimates of persons marginally attached to the labour force, of discouraged job seekers, and of persons not in the labour force classified by reasons for inactivity. The definitions for marginal attachment and discouraged job seekers used in the survey are discussed above. For further information on the content and methodology of the survey refer to Chapter 20 Section 10 . CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING 7.20 The Census of Population and Housing uses the self-enumerated questionnaire module and defines persons not in the labour force as 'persons aged 15 years and over who, during the week before census night, were neither employed nor unemployed'. As discussed previously, the self-enumerated questionnaire uses a limited set of questions to collect labour force status in the Census and measures persons not in the labour force more broadly than collections using the full questionnaire modules, including the Labour Force Survey and its supplementary topic Persons Not In the Labour Force. When comparing estimates from the Census with those from the Labour Force Survey, or the Persons Not In the Labour Force Survey, users should also note differences in scope and methodologies across the collections. Estimates of persons not in the labour force from the Census are available down to the SLA level. SPECIAL SOCIAL SURVEYS 7.21 The Special Social Surveys generally use the reduced questionnaire module and define persons not in the labour force as 'persons who were neither employed nor unemployed during the reference period'. Estimates are generally only produced for persons (in scope of the survey) aged 15 years and over. As discussed previously, the reduced questionnaire module uses a limited set of questions to determine labour force status, and measures not in the labour force more broadly than collections using the full questionnaire modules, including the Labour Force Survey and its supplementary topic Persons Not In the Labour Force. When comparing estimates from the Special Social Surveys with the Labour Force Survey, or with its supplementary topic Persons Not In the Labour Force, users should also note differences in scope and methodologies across the collections.
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