
Australia's labour market showed unexpected resilience in January, with the national unemployment rate holding steady at 4.1%, according to the latest figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
Despite a cooling economy, the data revealed a robust shift toward permanent work, as full-time employment surged by 50,000 positions, more than offsetting a decline of 33,000 part-time roles.
Sean Crick, the ABS head of labor statistics, noted that while the participation rate dipped to 66.7% from last year's record highs, the total number of employed persons still grew by 18,000 over the month.

The report highlighted a significant "catch-up" in productivity, with total hours worked climbing 0.6%.
The growth outpaced general employment gains, largely because fewer Australians took extended leave compared to typical January trends.
However, the news wasn't entirely positive for all demographics; the underemployment rate crept up to 5.9%, fueled specifically by a 1 percentage point spike in youth underemployment, which now sits at 14.8%.
Despite the slight rise in underutilisation to 10%, the long-term trend remains optimistic.
The trend unemployment rate actually edged down to 4.1% as the total number of unemployed Australians fell for the fourth month in a row.