Layoffs, Inequity and COVID-19: A Longitudinal Study of the Journalism Jobs Crisis in Australia from 2012 to 2020
Nik Dawson, Sacha Molitorisz, Marian-Andrei Rizoiu, Peter Fray

TL;DR
This longitudinal study analyzes Australian journalism employment data from 2012 to 2020, revealing industry volatility, COVID-19's worsening impact, and evolving gender and skill dynamics using data science and machine learning techniques.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive, data-driven analysis of journalism employment trends and gender disparities in Australia over an eight-year period, including the COVID-19 impact.
Findings
Journalism job ads increased until 2016, then declined.
COVID-19 significantly worsened the journalism jobs crisis.
Gender disparities in age and pay have intensified.
Abstract
In Australia and beyond, journalism is reportedly an industry in crisis, a crisis exacerbated by COVID-19. However, the evidence revealing the crisis is often anecdotal or limited in scope. In this unprecedented longitudinal research, we draw on data from the Australian journalism jobs market from January 2012 until March 2020. Using Data Science and Machine Learning techniques, we analyse two distinct data sets: job advertisements (ads) data comprising 3,698 journalist job ads from a corpus of over 8 million Australian job ads; and official employment data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Having matched and analysed both sources, we address both the demand for and supply of journalists in Australia over this critical period. The data show that the crisis is real, but there are also surprises. Counter-intuitively, the number of journalism job ads in Australia rose from 2012…
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