numbercruncher
Beware of Dropbears
- Joined
- 12 October 2006
- Posts
- 3,136
- Reactions
- 1
Leaked information from a Cabinet Budget Review submission suggests that 550 jobs from the 2500 in the new Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry will be axed, according to Queensland's Deputy Opposition Leader.
Speaking from Townsville this morning, Tim Mulherin said that was about 20 per cent of the department's staff.
Read more: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/que...on-the-line-20120720-22e82.html#ixzz218wskJ1z
Looks like another 500 on the scrapheap .....
Will be interesting to see the next round of unemployment figures. The company I'm currently working for gave a round-a-bout warning of, 'tough times ahead, pick up your act or pick up your notice' type speech, without being as direct.
Will be interesting to see the next round of unemployment figures. The company I'm currently working for gave a round-a-bout warning of, 'tough times ahead, pick up your act or pick up your notice' type speech, without being as direct.
Similar things happening at my work - including some people being asked leave over East (Big 4 Firm)
At work I deal quite a lot with suppliers etc, most of which are small businesses with many customers.
It's to the point now that I don't even ask how things are going, but almost all of them mention it anyway. The odd one or two says things are going OK, but most say that business is slow or outright dismal. It's probably fair to assume that this will lead to job losses in due course, if it hasn't already.
At work I deal quite a lot with suppliers etc, most of which are small businesses with many customers.
It's to the point now that I don't even ask how things are going, but almost all of them mention it anyway. The odd one or two says things are going OK, but most say that business is slow or outright dismal. It's probably fair to assume that this will lead to job losses in due course, if it hasn't already.
A significant contractor that we use went bust a few weeks ago. This was a contractor doing fairly specialised civil construction and electrical type work. I don't know how many employees they had, but I'd guess maybe 50 or so.
Another thing I've noticed is that there does seem to be less traffic on the roads. OK, the streets of Tasmania aren't exactly the best place to find lots of trafficbut it does seem quieter than it used to be. The only real explanations I can come up with relate to the economy - if people don't have a job then they won't be driving to and from work. And if they aren't spending then there's less freight to transport too. It's not as though there's some other logical explanation like a surge in petrol prices or an expansion of public transport services.
I am quite happy to be Full Time Unemployed and therefore adding to the jobless numbers.
If you work more than an hour a week you are in fact classified as working, so you are adding to the employed numbers, not the jobless
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?