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https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.270773
Copy DOIJournal: SSRN Electronic Journal | Publication Date: Dec 14, 2000 |
Citations: 2 |
The ABS definition of a includes: many workers who do not have a casual employment contract; a large group whose work is not casual (in the sense of being occasional, irregular or short term); and aggregates across distinct groups of casual contract employees who have very different entitlements and work arrangements. In August 1999, more than one in ten people categorized as casual employees by the ABS were in fact owner managers. This upward bias in the data has increased since the late 1980s and is most evident for people working full-time. Using alternative data from a new irregular ABS survey, it is estimated that there were 1.5 million casual contract employees in August 1998 (equivalent to 17.7 percent of employed persons, compared to 23.2 percent who would have satisfied the ABS definition of a casual employee). In August 1998, 95 percent of casual contract employees had an implicit contract for employment, only 4 percent had a job which their employer had indicated was short term, and many perceived that they were able to progress to an contract job. More than a third of casual contract employees had an implicit contract for employment and regular earnings in August 1998. Many of these ongoing casuals have been granted entitlements associated with employment (such as long service leave) because the true nature of their work is ongoing. However, 80 percent of casual contract employees in August 1998 were not protected by unfair dismissal laws, 62 percent had irregular earnings (excluding overtime), and 40 percent wanted to work more hours. They were also concentrated in low skill occupations. The welfare impacts of particular job traits will depend on the preferences of those affected. Casual contract employees tend to be young, female, and full-time dependent students. A large minority (29 percent in August 1998) are aged over 24 and have dependants, although this group is more likely to have employment conditions closer to contract employees. Hence, whether an employee has a casual contract provides little information about his or her welfare. Where the concern is about so-called precarious employment, analysts need to identify such employment on the basis of work arrangements rather than the type of employment contract.
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