Is there regional lock-in of unemployment rates in Australia?

Date

Authors

Best, Rohan
Burke, Paul

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Centre for Labour Market Research (CLMR)

Abstract

This paper assesses the persistence of unemployment rates across Australian regions to see if there is evidence of sustained disadvantage for some Australian regions. Using Australian labour market data for statistical area level 4 regions over 1999–2018, the paper finds that lagged regional unemployment rates have substantial explanatory power for current regional unemployment rates. This effect lasts at least 19 years, even after controlling for factors such as average income levels and the industry structure of each region. There is strong persistence in the male unemployment rate across regions, a weaker effect for the female unemployment rate, and no observable effect for the youth unemployment rate. Lock-in effects are even stronger for participation rates. The results suggest that there is a potential role for well-designed place-based policies to combat persistent labour market disadvantages in some regions.

Description

Citation

Best, Rohan and Burke, Paul J. 2019. ‘Is there regional lock-in of unemployment rates in Australia?’ Australian Journal of Labour Economics 22(2), 93–116.

Source

Australian Journal of Labour Economics

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

DOI

Restricted until