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Australian Capital Region (ACR): Economy Indicators (2012)
This table contains economy indicators (employment, value of building, number of businesses) for ACT (SA3) and surrounding NSW Councils (LGA) from ABS National Regional Profile, 2012.
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Australian Capital Region (ACR): Health Indicators (2011-2012)
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This table contains health indicators (fertility and death rate, medical practitioners and other key medical specialists) for ACT (SA3) and surrounding NSW Councils (LGA) from ABS National Regional Profile 2012 and 2011 ABS Census of Population and Housing.
ABS - Jobs In Australia - Employed in Multiple Jobs (GCCSA) 2015-2016
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This dataset presents aggregated data regarding the number of people employed in multiple jobs and their respective median income by the relevant statistical regions. The data spans over the 2015/16 financial year and is aggregated to the 2016 Greater Capital City Statistical Area (GCCSA) boundaries. Jobs in Australia is a new release that provides aggregate statistics from the recently developed Linked Employer-Employee Dataset (LEED). It provides new information about filled jobs in Australia, the people who hold them, and their employers. Jobs in Australia describes all job relationships accumulated over the course of a year. This means that job counts in this publication are higher than the estimates of filled jobs published in the quarterly Australian Labour Account, which provides a point-in-time, or stock measure. These statistics about jobs also differ from Labour Force Survey statistics, which estimate the number of people who held a job in each month. This data is Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) data (catalogue number: 6160.0) used with permission from the ABS. For more information on the release please visit the Australian Bureau of Statistics The purpose of this publication is to provide new information about the number and nature of filled jobs in Australia, the people who hold them, and their employers. It includes information about multiple job-holding and employment in local areas. Jobs in Australia counts all jobs held during the reference year. This complements and expands on quarterly stock estimates of filled jobs presented in the Australian Labour Account. AURIN has spatially enabled the original data. The following additional changes were made: Where data was not published for confidential reasons, "np" in the original data, the records have been set to null. Total values may be higher than the sum of the published components due to this confidentialisation.
Dept of Primary Industries and Regions - Executive Employment Reporting Primary Industries and Regions SA
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Executive Employment Reporting by Primary Industries and Regions South Australia for the period 2011-12 to 2023-24 for annual reporting purposes.
ABS - Jobs In Australia - Employed Persons Jobs (SA3) 2014-2019
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This dataset presents aggregated data regarding employed persons within the relevant statistical regions, including the number of employee jobs and median employee income per job by sex, classified by Statistical Area Level 3 (SA3). The data spans from 2014-15 to 2018-19 financial year and is aggregated to the 2016 SA3 boundaries. Jobs in Australia provide aggregate statistics and are sourced from the Linked Employer-Employee Dataset (LEED). It provides new information about filled jobs in Australia, the people who hold them, and their employers. Employee person refers to any person with one or more job. Employed persons in this publication can be employees, owner-managers of unincorporated enterprises, or both. Employed persons are persons who have employment income in the reference year, excluding those whose employment income is made up entirely of an employment termination payment. Employed persons have one or more jobs on the job file. The job counts in this release differ from the filled job estimates from other sources such as the Australian Labour Account and the Labour Force Australia. The Jobs in Australia release provides insights into all jobs held throughout the year, while the Labour Account data provides the number of filled jobs at a point-in-time each quarter (and annually for the financial year reference period), and Labour Force Survey data measures the number of people employed each month. For more information on the release please visit the Australian Bureau of Statistics Data Purpose This release provides statistics on the number and nature of jobs, the people who hold them, and their employers. These statistics can be used to understand regional labour markets or to identify the impact of major changes in local communities. The release also provides new insights into the number of jobs people hold, the duration of jobs, and the industries and employment income of concurrent jobs. The scope of these data includes individuals who submitted an individual tax return to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO), individuals who had a Pay As You Go (PAYG) payment summary issued by an employer and their employers. AURIN has spatially enabled the original data. The following additional changes were made: Totals are higher than the sum of their components due to missing information in the underlying data. Where data was not published for confidential reasons, "np" in the original data, the records have been set to null.
ABS - Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas (SEIFA) - The Index of Economic Resources (SLA) 2006
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This data is Statistical Local Areas (SLA) based Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas (SEIFA) Index of Economic Resources (IER) - This index includes variables that are associated with economic resources. Variables include rent paid, income by family type, mortgage payments, and rental properties, based on the 2006 census. The data follows the 2006 Australian Standard Geographical Classification (ASGC) boundaries. The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) has developed indexes to allow ranking of regions/areas, providing a method of determining the level of social and economic wellbeing in that region. There are four indexes included in the SEIFA 2006 product. They relate to socio-economic aspects of geographic areas. Each index summarises a different aspect of the socio-economic conditions in an area. The indexes have been obtained by a technique called principal components analysis. This technique summarises the information from a variety of social and economic variables, calculating weights that will give the best summary for the underlying variables. For the SEIFA indexes, each index uses a different set of underlying variables. All the indexes (including the Index of Relative Socio-Economic Disadvantage) have been constructed so that relatively disadvantaged areas (e.g. areas with many low income earners) have low index values. This data is ABS data (catalogue number: 2033.0.55.001) used with permission from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. For more information on this data please visit the Australian Bureau of Statistics.Please note: AURIN has spatially enabled the original data following the 2006 ASGC.
Economic Analysis Division - Regional profile Northern Adelaide
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Regional profile tables containing gross regional product and output, employment, household income and expenditure, and trade. The tables are estimates derived as part of the input-output table construction process for South Australia and its regions. They are not taken directly from a census or survey, but are based on a mix of collected data, state shares (if a regional table) and estimates based on “parent” table values.
Socio-economic variables by LGA for Australia
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Socio-economic variables of Local Government Areas in Australia (1996-2006). The variables were derived from 2006, 2001 and 1996 census.
Australian Bureau of Statistics - Private New Capital Expenditure and Expected Expenditure
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Preliminary estimates derived from a sample survey of private businesses. Contains estimates of actual and expected new capital expenditure by type of asset (new buildings and other structures/equipment, plant and machinery) and by selected Australian and New Zealand Standard Industrial Classification industries. These statistics are expressed in current prices and chain volume measures, in original, seasonally adjusted and trend terms and are available for Australia and by state/territory.