More full-time work lifts weekly earnings
More full-time work lifts weekly
earnings
7 October 2016
Median weekly earnings from paid
employment rose $44, to reach $924, between the June 2015
and June 2016 quarters, Statistics New Zealand said today.
This increase of 5.0 percent was the largest annual increase
since the June 2007 quarter. Paid employment includes both
wage and salary earners
and self-employed people.
“A
rise in the proportion of full-time wage and salary earners,
and the number of hours being worked, together pushed up
median earnings for workers,” labour and income statistics
manager Mark Gordon said. Full-time workers (working 30 or
more hours) typically have higher weekly and hourly earnings
than
people in part-time employment.
Workers living in Auckland, Waikato, Gisborne/Hawke's Bay, and Canterbury received significantly higher median weekly earnings from paid employment than a year ago. In the North Island as a whole, earnings increased 7.0 percent (up to $944 a week), compared with 2.0 percent (to $880 a week) in the South Island.
“While the increase in weekly earnings is
similar to that before the 2008 economic downturn, increases
in hourly wages were more modest,” Mr Gordon said.
“Median hourly earnings from wages and salaries increased
2.9 percent, similar to increases in the past seven years,
but well below the 6.1 percent
increase 10 years
ago.”
For more information about these statistics:
• Visit Labour Market Statistics (Income): June 2016 quarter
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