6150.0 - Australian Labour Account: Concepts, Sources and Methods, Oct 2019  
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 12/11/2019   
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Labour Payments quadrant

The Labour Payments quadrant accounts for the costs incurred by enterprises in employing labour and the incomes received by people from its provision.

Figure 10.1: Labour Payments Quadrant, Identity Relationship Diagram

Graphic: Labour Payments Quadrant, Identity Relationship Diagram

Labour payments concepts

Figure 10.2 below summarises the conceptual framework for statistical measures of employee remuneration in Australia (in the context of the broader concept of labour costs). The narrowest concept outlined in the international guidelines is that of 'Earnings'. Concepts of 'Wages and salaries', 'Employee income', 'Compensation of Employees' and 'Labour costs' all include and extend upon the concept of 'Earnings'.

Figure 10.2: Australian conceptual framework for measures of employee remuneration

Graphic: Australian conceptual framework for measures of employee remuneration

Source: Labour Statistics: Concepts, Sources and Methods (ABS cat. no 6102.0.55.001)

The statistical measure of labour costs is based on the concept of labour as a cost to the employer and relates to:

    • all cash and in-kind payments of wage and salaries to employees;
    • all contributions by employers in respect of their employees to social security, private pension, casualty insurance, life insurance and similar schemes; and
    • all other costs borne by employers in the employment of labour that are not related to employee compensation (such as costs of training, welfare services to employees, payroll taxes etc.).

Measures of labour costs should be net of any subsidies, rebates or allowances from governments for wage and salary payments to employees, or for other labour costs borne by employers.

The definition of labour costs from the 1966 International Conference of Labour Statisticians, paragraph 39 is ‘...remuneration for work performed, payments in respect of time paid for but not worked, bonuses and gratuities, the cost of food, drink and other payments in kind, cost of workers' housing borne by employers, employers' social security expenditures, cost to the employer for vocational training, welfare services and miscellaneous items, such as transport of workers, work clothes and recruitment together with taxes...’.

Labour payments sources

Source data for quarterly estimates of labour payments

Labour payments data are primarily sourced from underlying data from two ABS National Accounts publications: Australian System of National Accounts (ABS cat. no. 5204.0) and the Australian National Accounts: National Income, Expenditure and Product (ABS cat. no. 5206.0). Please refer to Chapter 11 of the Australian System of National Accounts: Concepts, Sources and Methods (ABS cat. no. 5216.0) for details on how data are compiled for National Accounts.

Data components of other labour related costs to employers are sourced from the Australian National Accounts: Input-Output Tables, Product Details (ABS cat. no. 5215.0.55.001) and underlying information from ABS Supply-Use tables.

Table 10.3 below summarises data sources used in compiling quarterly estimates in the Labour Payments quadrant.

Table 10.3: Description of quarterly data sources and uses for the Labour Payments quadrant


Source data
Use in compiling quarterly data

Australian System of National Accounts (ABS cat. no. 5204.0)Used in compiling estimates of labour income from self-employment.

Australian National Accounts: National Income, Expenditure and Product (ABS cat. no. 5206.0)Used in compiling estimates of:
• Compensation of employees;
• Payroll taxes; and
• Labour income from self-employment.

Australian National Accounts: Input-Output Tables, Product Details (ABS cat. no. 5215.0.55.001)Used in compiling estimates of:
• Training costs; and
• Recruitment costs.

ABS Supply-Use tablesUsed in compiling estimates of:
• Employment subsidies;
• Training costs; and
• Recruitment costs.

Government Finance Statistics, Australia (ABS cat. no. 5512.0)Used in compiling estimates of employment subsidies.

Job Vacancies, Australia (ABS cat. no. 6354.0) Used in compiling quarterly estimates of Recruitment costs.


Business Indicators, Australia (ABS cat. no. 5676.0)Used in compiling quarterly estimates of Training costs.



Source data for annual estimates of labour payments

Source data for the annual estimates of labour payments are the same as those described above for quarterly estimates.

Labour payments methods

Graphic: Payments Quadrant Diagram

Methods for the compilation of quarterly and industry estimates of labour payments

Total labour income

Total labour income is the sum of:
    • Compensation of employees; and
    • Labour income from self-employment.

Total labour costs

Total labour costs is the sum of:
    • Total labour income; and
    • Other employment related costs.

Estimates of Compensation of employees at a total economy and industry division level are derived from underlying Australian National Accounts data. Division level data from the Australian National Accounts is further disaggregated to industry subdivision, using Compensation of employees information from the ABS Supply-Use tables for most industries. For some industries, the Supply-Use industries are more aggregated than industry subdivision. For these industries, information from the annual Economic Activity Survey or the proportion of filled jobs from business sources is used to disaggregate data to industry subdivision. One exception is Division S (Other Services), which uses information relating to earnings in all jobs from the household Characteristics of Employment Survey to disaggregate data to industry subdivision, as subdivision 96 (Private Households Employing Staff) is out of scope of all business collections.

Quarterly Compensation of Employees data are not available prior to September 2002. For earlier time periods, data at industry division level are backcast by applying movement in gross earnings from Wage and Salary Earners, Australia (ABS cat. no. 6248.0) to the September 2002 level. These data relate to both the public and private sectors for each industry division except for Division A (Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing), which is limited to the public sector only. As the data are also on a historical industry classification basis, conversion factors (based on annual Australian National Accounts Compensation of Employees benchmark data) are also applied to approximate the current industry classification. These backcast quarterly data are then benchmarked to published annual levels.

Labour income from self-employment is an estimate of the share of Gross Mixed Income (GMI) attributable to the provision of labour. GMI is the surplus or deficit accruing from production by unincorporated enterprises that includes both the return on labour and return on capital.

The calculation of the labour share of GMI on an annual basis for each industry follows the method described in compiling Productivity Statistics outlined in Chapter 19 (Productivity Measures) of the Australian System of National Accounts: Concepts, Sources and Methods (ABS cat. no. 5216.0). This method assumes that self-employed proprietors receive the same average compensation per hour as wage and salary earners, and can be summarised as comprising the following steps:
  1. Average hourly income of wage and salary earners in each industry is calculated by dividing Compensation of Employees by the estimated number of hours worked in all jobs by employees in the industry (excluding the self-employed).
  2. This hourly rate is then multiplied by the estimated number of hours worked by self-employed persons (OMUEs) whose main job is classified to the industry. This information is derived by expanding the average number of hours worked in the reference weeks recorded in the Labour Force Survey by the number of weeks in the quarter and aggregating for the year.
  3. This estimate is then multiplied by a scaling factor, to constrain to total industry GMI reported in the National Accounts. The scaling factor represents the ratio of the sum of the independently calculated labour and capital shares of GMI, for each industry, to the independently calculated estimate of total industry GMI reported in the National Accounts. This difference can arise from the use of different sources and methods to derive estimates of returns to labour and capital, to the method used by national accounts in calculating total GMI.
  4. As productivity statistics are not compiled for industries with significant “non-market” components, no GMI scaling factor is applied to estimated self-employed labour income for Division P (Education and Training) and Division Q (Health Care and Social Assistance).
  5. No GMI is estimated for Division D (Electricity, Gas, Water and Waste Services), Division K (Financial and Insurance Services) and Division O (Public Administration and Safety), as there are no owner managed unincorporated enterprises (OMUEs) classified to these industries.
The Australian Labour Account calculates quarterly labour income from self-employment for each industry division by taking the scaled labour share of GMI from underlying Australian National Accounts productivity data, as calculated using the steps described above, and applying this share to the total level of quarterly GMI for each industry division. This approach ensures consistency between Australian Labour Account estimates of labour income from self-employment and Australian National Accounts GMI data.

As productivity statistics are not compiled for Division P (Education and Training) and Division Q (Health Care and Social Assistance), the scaled labour share of GMI for Division M (Professional, Scientific and Technical Services) is applied to total quarterly GMI for these industries. In addition, the scaled labour share of GMI for Division I (Transport, Postal and Warehousing) is used to represent Division A (Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing) while the scaled labour share of GMI for Division A is further investigated.

As industry productivity statistics are only compiled annually, the same annual scaled labour share of GMI is applied to each quarterly GMI measure for the financial year.

To disaggregate estimates of labour income from self-employment for each industry division to subdivision level, Gross Operating Surplus information from the ABS Supply-Use tables is used for most industries. For some industries, the Supply-Use industries are more aggregated than industry subdivision. For these industries, information from the annual Economic Activity Survey is used.

Quarterly GMI data are not available prior to September 2001. For earlier time periods, data at the industry division level are backcast by applying movements in original Gross Value Added (chain volumes) to the September 2001 level. These backcast data are then benchmarked to annual scaled GMI. For Division P (Education and Training) and Division Q (Health Care and Social Assistance), labour income from self-employment is backcast directly by applying movements in Gross Value Added (chain volumes).

Other employment costs

Other employment costs are the sum of
    • Employers payroll taxes;
    • Payment for recruitment services;
    • Training costs; less
    • Employment subsidies.

Employers payroll taxes

Estimates for employers’ payroll taxes at industry division level are taken from underlying Australian National Accounts estimates. Division level data from the Australian National Accounts is further disaggregated to industry subdivision, using Compensation of Employees information from the ABS Supply-Use tables for most industries. For some industries, the Supply-Use industries are more aggregated than industry subdivision. For these industries, information from the annual Economic Activity Survey is used.

Payment for Recruitment services and Training costs

Estimates of annual total expenditure on recruitment services are calculated as the sum of Intermediate Use (purchase price) and Government Final Consumption Expenditure sourced from the Australian National Accounts: Input-Output Tables, Product Details (ABS cat. no. 5215.0.55.001) for Input-Output Product Classification (IOPC) 72110010 (Employment placement and recruitment services). Total quarterly job vacancies from Job Vacancies, Australia (ABS cat. no. 6354.0) are used as a quarterly indicator series to distribute this annual total across the four financial year quarters.

Training Costs are similarly derived and sourced from the Input-Output tables, using the following IOPC codes:
  • IOPC 81010010 Technical, vocational and other non-tertiary education services;
  • IOPC 81020010 Tertiary higher education services (including undergraduate and postgraduate);
  • IOPC 82120010 Arts education services (excluding vocational);
  • IOPC 82190011 Adult, community and other education services; and
  • IOPC 82200010 Education support services.

Total wages and salaries for Division P (Education and Training) from Business Indicators, Australia (ABS cat. no. 5676.0) are used as a quarterly indicator series to distribute this annual total across the four financial year quarters. As these data are not available prior to March 2001, data for earlier time periods are backcast by applying movements in private sector gross earnings from Wage and Salary Earners, Australia (ABS cat. no. 6248.0) to the March 2001 level.

As Input-Output tables are only available infrequently for earlier periods and with a significant time lag for more recent periods, estimates of total annual expenditure on recruitment services and training costs for the intervening and out years are compiled using underlying data from the Supply-Use tables, based on applying movements in the following Supply-Use Product Classification (SUPC) codes:
  • SUPC 72005 Employment placement and recruitment services;
  • SUPC 80205 Technical, vocational and tertiary education services; and
  • SUPC 80310 Arts, adult and other education services.

Supply-Use tables also provide proportions used to allocate total quarterly expenditure on recruitment services and training costs to industry subdivision. These proportions are based on total intermediate use of these products for each Supply-Use industry, with information from the Economic Activity Survey used for those industries where Supply-Use industries are more aggregated than industry subdivision.

Employment subsidies

Employment subsidies represent payments made by the government to employers who hire eligible job seekers including mature age, disabled, indigenous, youth, parents, long-term unemployed job seekers, etc. This information is sourced from data provided to the ABS by the Department of Finance to compile estimates for the publication Government Finance Statistics, Australia (ABS cat. no. 5512.0). As data for the current year employment subsidies estimate is not available at the time of publication of the Australian Labour Account, annual data for the current year are modelled based on previous years’ movements.

As data from Government Finance Statistics, Australia (ABS cat. no. 5512.0) are annual data, quarterly estimates of employment subsidies are derived by evenly distributing the annual estimate across the four quarters.

Data from Government Finance Statistics, Australia (ABS cat. no. 5512.0) are not available prior to 2010-11. Data for earlier time periods are modelled based on movements in a similar GFS data item, namely “Commonwealth subsidies paid to other”, where “other” refers to other than public trading enterprises.

To allocate total quarterly employment subsidies to industry subdivision, underlying data from the Supply-Use tables for subsidies on production by Supply-Use industry are used to derive industry proportions, with information from the Economic Activity Survey used for those industries where Supply-Use industries are more aggregated than industry subdivision.

Method for the compilation of annual estimates of labour payments

As all data contained in the Labour Payments quadrant are flow data, which represent a measure of activity over a given period, data across time periods are additive. Therefore, annual data in the Labour Payments quadrant are derived as the sum of the four quarterly estimates.

It should be noted that the Labour Payments quadrant includes derived measures such as Average labour Income per employed Person. These are calculated using a flow as the numerator (e.g. Labour income), divided by a stock for the denominator (e.g. Labour Account employed persons). Where these data are presented in annual terms, caution must be exercised when comparing this result with other estimates measured at the same point in time, such as estimates of Average Weekly Earnings. This data is intended for comparison across time and industries within the Australian Labour Account, and to provide a link between the Persons and Labour Payments quadrants.