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Organisation

Jobs and Skills Australia

Owning Institution:
Acronym:
JSA

As of 16 November 2022, Jobs and Skills Australia (JSA) commenced as an Australian government statutory body. The government established JSA as a statutory body to provide independent advice on current, emerging and future workforce, skills and training needs.

Report

Education and training divides: gendered skills, pathways and outcomes


Education and training choices, skills, outcomes and pathways – like jobs, work and pay – are highly gendered in Australia. This report provides insights on these education and training divides. It shows that gendered patterns in education and training remain deeply entrenched, with little sign of change that could shift Australia’s occupational gender segregation.
Report

Our Gen AI transition: case studies


A compendium of eight case studies provides practical insights into how individuals and organisations are navigating the implementation of Generative AI (Gen AI) in Australia. The case studies highlight the importance of context-specific adoption and adaptation rather than one-size-fits-all approaches. The compendium is organised around three themes that emerged from the case studies.
Data portal

Occupation and industry profiles


This data portal enables exploration of the latest trends and insights into Australia’s job market by occupation (which categorises workers by the job they do) and industry (which categorises workers based on the industry that that work in). The data is broken down into a number of categories and both datasets are searchable.
Report

Our Gen AI transition: implications for work and skills


This report looks at how generative artificial intelligence (Gen AI) is starting to transform work, skills and the Australian labour market. It provides a whole-of-labour-market view of Gen AI’s potential, impact to date, and what’s needed to support Australia's digital and AI transition. The report finds that Gen AI is more likely to augment jobs...
Report

New perspectives on old problems: gendered jobs work and pay


The first in a three-part series on new perspectives on gender economic inequality, revealing how much gender shapes jobs, work and pay across Australia. The report highlights the scale of occupational segregation. It finds that despite more women participating in the workforce than ever before, men still earn more than women in 98% of occupations.

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