Skip to content
Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care

Booming care economy now employs 15% of working Australians: New Research

e61 Institute 2 mins read

The rapidly growing care economy now employs 15% of working Australians and its recent growth has lowered measures of the nation’s productivity, new research by the e61 Institute has found.

 

With the NDIS and population ageing increasing demand for care, the sector has grown dramatically since 2010 when it took up 10% of the workforce.

 

While new migrants filled 20% of these jobs, this was actually a lower share than in other fast-growing industries. Instead, the vast majority of new jobs were filled by workers switching from other industries such as hospitality, retail and manufacturing.

 

In part, this reflects that retail and hospitality are high ‘churn’ industries, that many Australians use as a first rung on the job ladder. Fast growth in the care economy looks to have captured many of the subsequent second steps on the job ladder.

 

The study found that there has been virtually no measured labour productivity growth in the care economy for 20 years. Because its measured productivity is low, the growth of the sector has reduced overall productivity by 0.2 per cent each year since 2019.

 

“The reallocation of labour to the care economy is a massive generational shift. It is now such a large part of the economy and set to grow further,” said e61 Institute Research Manager Ewan Rankin.

 

“For the past 20 years we have failed to generate labour productivity growth in the care sector, but there is ample potential to do better over the next 20.

 

“When people hear ‘improve productivity’ they tend to think about harsh programs of cuts and slashing staff, but that’s unlikely to be an approach that will work in this sector at this time. 

 

“Boosting productivity in the care sector could instead come from adjusting funding models to pay for outcomes rather than quantity, a greater focus on preventative care, and technology adoption in areas like administration and diagnostics.”

 

The research also found that since 2010, wages in the care sector have grown faster than all other industries except utilities and energy - increasing 50 per cent compared with the industry average of 46 per cent. But job vacancies are still much higher than in other industries, spiking to more than 60,000 over the past four years.

 

“Governments and the Fair Work Commission need to manage the high level of job vacancies in the industry,” said Mr Rankin.

 

“Maintaining relatively strong wages growth in the care economy for a time is likely to be supporting the necessary reallocation of workers to the sector.

 

“Governments should also consider whether non-compete clauses, occupational licensing or other factors are restricting the desirable level of labour mobility.”


Contact details:

Charlie Moore: 0452 606 171

More from this category

  • Engineering, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 17/12/2025
  • 09:02
UNSW Sydney

UNSW students claim victory in international artificial heart competition

A team of undergraduate engineering students from UNSW Sydney has claimed first place at a prestigious international artificial heart design competition in Vienna. The…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 17/12/2025
  • 07:56
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health

Summer Mozzie Warning – Ross River Virus risk linked to warmer temperatures

17 December 2025 - Australians are being urged to prevent mosquito bites this summer, after research mapping studies from across the country found that warmer temperatures heighten the risk of Ross River Virus outbreaks, especially inriverland and coastal regions. The scoping review, led by the University of Adelaide, and published today in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, also uncovered a knowledge gap when it comes to understanding the impact of temperature on Ross River Virus notifications within inland Australia. Ross River Virus is a common mosquito-borne diseases in Australia, with around 3,000 cases reported annually. It…

  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 17/12/2025
  • 06:00
Leukaemia Foundation

Leukaemia Foundation welcomes South Australian Government commitment to establish dedicated CAR T therapy service

The Leukaemia Foundation has welcomed the announcement by theMalinauskas Labor Government that South Australia is establishing a dedicated CAR T-cell therapy service as a line of treatment for people living with blood cancer – marking a major advancement in cancer care in the State. The new service, expected to commence by mid-2026, will significantly improve access to this highly specialised, life-saving treatment and reduce the need for South Australians to travel interstate for care. Leukaemia Foundation Chief Executive Officer Chris Tanti said the announcement represented a huge win for blood cancer patients and their families. “This is a landmark step…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.