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Labour Market Churn Q3 2024

The job churn rate for Q3 2024 was 12.8%, down 1.3 percentage points on the same period in 2023

Online ISSN: 2990-8272
CSO statistical release, , 11am
A CSO Frontier Series Output

This publication is categorised as a CSO Frontier Series Output. Particular care must be taken when interpreting the statistics in this release as it may use new methods which are under development and/or data sources which may be incomplete, for example new administrative data sources.

Key Findings

  • Job churn in Quarter 3 2024 was 365,750, down 26,390 (6.7%) from Q3 2023. The associated job churn rate for Q3 2024 was 12.8%, down 1.3 percentage points from the 14.1% recorded a year earlier.

  •  The total number of jobs created in Q3 2024 was 142,528, an increase of 11,597 (8.9%) when compared with Q3 2023.

  • There were 119,706 job destructions in Q3 2024, which was 17,371 (17.0%) more than the number recorded 12 months earlier.

  • The 325,403 hirings recorded in Q3 2024 were 1,598 (-0.5%) fewer than the 327,001 observed in Q3 2023.

  • In Q3 2024 a total of 302,581 job separations were recorded, up 4,176 (1.4%) from the 298,405 observed in Q3 2023.

  • There were 143,386 separations from primary employments in Q3 2024. Of these, 101,315 (70.7%) people were no longer on the Revenue PAYE Modernisation (PMOD) system, 27,097 (18.9%) were employed but in a different economic sector, and 14,974 (10.4%) remained employed in the same economic sector but with a different organisation or company.

  • There were 2,534,105 people who stayed in their current employment, or stayers, in Q3 2024. This was the highest figure for stayers in the current series.

Statistician's Comment

The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has today (19 December 2024) issued Labour Market Churn results for Q3 2024.

Labour Market Churn is a Frontier release. It uses Revenue PMOD data to provide insights on employee turnover within the labour market. The release contains figures on employees who stay in their current job, those who leave an employment, and those who take up new jobs. It also provides breakdowns of the employee turnover figures by economic sector and firm size. For more information and definitions of the terminology used in the release, please see the Editor's Note below.

Commenting on today’s release, Conor Delves, Statistician in the Labour Market Analysis Section, said: “The job churn figure for Q3 2024 was 365,750, which was a decrease of 26,390 from Q3 2023. The job churn rate, that is the job churn figure relative to total employment, for Q3 2024 was 12.8%, down 1.3 percentage points from the 14.1% recorded in Q3 2023.

There were 142,528 job creations in Q3 2024 and 119,706 job destructions in the same period.

In Q3 2024, 11.4% of employees were no longer in an employment that they held in the previous quarter.

The largest year-on-year increase in job creations in Q3 2024 were seen in Administrative & Support Service Activities, where creations were up 33.4% to 12,789 and Information & Communication, where creations rose 33.7% to 7,222.

In Q3 2024, the highest job churn rate was recorded in the Administrative & Support Service sector (25.6%), while the lowest rate (7.4%) was recorded in the Information & Communication sector.

The firm size group that saw the highest job churn rate in Q3 2024 was those employing 50-249 people (16.2%). The lowest job churn rate in the quarter was in firms with between one and nine employees (6.6%)."

Editor's Note

Labour Market Churn is a Frontier release. It uses Revenue PMOD data to provide insights on employee turnover within the labour. In addition, while the release does not capture the reasons behind employee job moves, it does detail whether job leavers remained employed in the same economic sector, a different sector, or have left PMOD employment.

The series covers the time period from Q2 2020 to the end of the current quarter, Q3 2024.

Definitions of the Terminology

Job churn: This is a measure of employee turnover that captures employee job matches over and above the minimum that would be required to accommodate total labour market growth or decline. In simpler terms, it is a measure of employee turnover providing insight into the number of employees who changed job and stayed in the same job.

Job churn rate: Measures job churn relative to total employment.

Stayers: People who remain in the same job are referred to as stayers; those who take up a new employment are referred to as hirings; and those who leave an employment are called separations.

Total employments: A combination of stayers and hirings.

Job creations: If an enterprise has more hirings than separations in a quarter, then it is said to have had job creations, with the net difference between hirings and separations being the number of job creations. Example:

  •  Company A had 10 hirings and six separations over a particular period. It therefore had a job creation figure of four.

Job destructions: Conversely, if an enterprise has more separations than hirings in a quarter, then it is said to have had job destructions, with the net difference between separations and hirings being the number of job destructions. Example: 

  • Company B had 20 hirings and 40 job destructions over a particular period. It therefore had a job destruction figure of 20.

Job creations and job destructions are a net figure based on hirings and separations at enterprise level. In each time period, an enterprise experiences either job creations, no change, or job destructions.

Primary employment: This refers to the main job of employees who have more than one employment. The Background Notes has more information.

Job Churn for Q3 2024 was 365,750 down 26,390 (-6.7%) on the same period in 2023

Figure 1.1 Hirings, Separations, and Job Churn
Table 1.1 Job Creation, Destruction, Churn, and Churn Rate
 Job CreationJob DestructionJob Churn Job Churn Rate
 Number %
Q3 2023130,931102,335392,140 14.1
Q2 2024175,61284,662323,356 11.5
Q3 2024142,528119,706365,750 12.8
      
Quarterly Change-33,08435,04442,394 1.3
Annual Change11,59717,371-26,390 -1.3
Source: CSO Labour Market Churn

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