Groundbreaking report reveals public sector workers are pillars of Illawarra's economy

South Coast Labour Council

***Associate Professor Martin O'Brien and South Coast Labour Council Secretary, Arthur Rorris will be joined by Henry Rajendra Deputy President of NSW Teachers Federation to launch the report outside Keira High School, Lysaght Street, North Wollongong on Monday 15 November 7:45am***

The contribution of public sector wages to Illawarra's economy grew during the prolonged crises of Black summer bushfires and COVID-19, according to a new University of Wollongong report which for the first time has measured the economic contribution at a local government level.

"This is the most granular we have ever seen the impact of the public sector measured," said the report author, Associate Professor Martin O'Brien. "This is the first time we've looked at it at an LGA level, and the data shows secure public sector employment doesn't just benefit the worker, it actually flows through to the whole community."

The report found not only was public sector employment a greater proportion of the labour market in the nine LGAs, during the extended crises of the bushfires and COVID-19 the public services contribution to the regional economy also grew.

It found in Wollongong the contribution grew 1.5%, to contribute 13% to the area's GRP, while in Kiama it rose 2.1% to be worth 22%. By comparison the contribution in Greater Sydney grew 0.8% over the same period.

"We know public sector workers spend 80% of their wage in their community - when you're in a tourist town hit with the double whammy of bushfires and then a global pandemic the customer who is a local teacher, nurse, fiery or Service NSW worker becomes your lifeline," said South Coast Labour Council Secretary, Arthur Rorris.

"Public sector employees work, live, and spend all year round. This report demonstrates, during prolonged crises such as bushfires and COVID-19 their paychecks actually provide stimulus to their communities."

Overall public sector employment makes up 13.36% of the Greater Sydney labour market and 15.37% of the Australian labour market, but this study shows that in regional labour markets it is much higher. In Wollongong it makes up a fifth of the labour market (20%) while in Kiama it accounts for 22% of the labour market.

The report found public sector wages provide a solid economic base during annual fluctuations, such as seasonal tourism or agriculture, and during crises this impact is amplified. Ultimately the report says the contribution public sector income makes to the GRP could have been higher and provided greater stimulus had the NSW government not frozen public sector wages.

"A modest 2.5% pay increase would have likely been significantly amplified across the regions. Instead the government chose the path of austerity which hurt all workers, not just the ones with the frozen wages" said Troy Wright, the Assistant Secretary of the Public Service Association of NSW.

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