logo
The AI-proof jobs that will be in high demand in Australia

The AI-proof jobs that will be in high demand in Australia

Daily Mail​30-06-2025
White collar jobs typically paying six-figures salaries are expected to be in short supply by 2030 despite quantum advances in artificial intelligence. The Future Skills Organisation predicted accountants, financial advisers, IT managers, chief executives and bank workers would have the biggest skills gap within five years, even though AI promises to do many thought-based, analytical tasks.
These jobs have average taxable incomes in the six figures, or at least close to it, and are expected to be in even more demand despite rapid technological advances with large language models. 'Australia faces a projected shortfall of almost 250,000 skilled workers across finance, technology, and business by 2030,' the Future Skills Organisation said in its Workforce Plan 2025.
'The education and training pipeline is not yet delivering the volume or alignment needed. 'Australia's technology workforce is expanding rapidly, even amid global layoffs - because businesses increasingly rely on digital capabilities, the professionals who deliver them, and the infrastructure that supports them.' Australia was expected to need 221,400 accountants by 2030, but only 215,400 are forecast to be available - a gap of 6,000.
Accountants are still highly paid, having an average taxable income of $127,000 for management accountants and $99,736 for tax accountants, new tax office data for 2022-23 revealed. IT managers were expected to be in short supply, by 16,300 in five years from now, with 130,300 needed from an available pool of 114,000, in a job typically paying $167,154.
Australians now need to earn more than $400,000 a year to be among the top one per cent of income earners, with ophthalmologist eye surgeons having the highest tax income of $643,389, ahead of neurosurgeons on $611,754, and plastic and reconstructive surgeons on $595,969. Broadly speaking, only surgeons on taxable incomes of $472,475 and anaethetists on $447,193 made the top one per cent. Just 125,771 Australians earned at least $408,974 - putting them among the top 0.8 per cent of 16.1million income taxpayers.
The top ten occupations have average salaries above $192,000 - a level more than double the average salary of $73,612. This list also included finance dealers ($355,233), internal medicine specialists ($342,457), psychiatrists ($280,146), other medical practitioners ($259,802), mining engineers ($206,423), judges or legal professionals ($206,408) and chief executives ($194,987). The shortfall of CEOs was expected to grow to 7,900, with 61,500 needed from a pool of 53,600. At the other end of the spectrum, waiters had the lowest average income of $28,885, with many working part-time or casual roles.
Not all the jobs expected to be in short supply are well-paid now. The Future Skills Organisation expected bookkeepers to be in short supply by 27,100, with 98,700 needed from a labour supply of 71,600, but this professional only has a taxable income of $61,374. Accounting clerks were tipped to have a labour shortage of 26,000 positions, with 145,800 needed from a pool of 119,800, despite having a lowly pay of $71,630. Receptionists were also predicted to have in demand, a 15,300 gap between the 193,500 needed and the 178,200 available, for a job typically paying just $44,373.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japan MOF preparing to raise long-term rate estimate in FY2026 budget request, Yomiuri reports
Japan MOF preparing to raise long-term rate estimate in FY2026 budget request, Yomiuri reports

Reuters

time4 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Japan MOF preparing to raise long-term rate estimate in FY2026 budget request, Yomiuri reports

TOKYO, Aug 22 (Reuters) - Japan's Ministry of Finance is preparing to raise its assumed interest rate for long-term government bonds at 2.6% for fiscal 2026/27 budget requests, the highest level in 17 years, the Yomiuri newspaper reported on Friday. The country's assumed bond interest rate was 2.1% during the fiscal 2025 budget request phase before being adjusted to 2.0% in the final budget. The increase for the next budget would lead to higher debt servicing costs, the report also said without citing sources.

Chilling warning for Australia's cashed-up baby boomers as Albanese government signals tax changes
Chilling warning for Australia's cashed-up baby boomers as Albanese government signals tax changes

Daily Mail​

time36 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Chilling warning for Australia's cashed-up baby boomers as Albanese government signals tax changes

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has signalled sweeping changes to Australia's tax system, focusing on 'intergenerational equity' and fairer treatment for younger workers. And it could come at a cost for the baby boomers. Reforms being considered include cracking down on superannuation tax breaks for wealthy retirees, tightening family trust regulations, and reducing capital gains tax exemptions. The federal government has already moved to double the tax rate on super balances above $3 million, and may introduce a lower company tax rate for smaller businesses. Chalmers said in an interview with the ABC's 7.30 host Sarah Ferguson that more needed to be done to ensure the system does not unfairly favour older Australians and baby boomers at the expense of younger generations. Chalmers told Ms Ferguson, following his three-day economic roundtable, that any future tax reform must address intergenerational fairness. 'I think one of the clear areas of consensus out of the Economic Reform Roundtable is that when we look to reform the tax system, one of the most important objectives is to make it fairer in intergenerational terms,' Chalmers said. 'There's a number of ways that we are looking to improve the tax system, cut taxes for working people, work on the multinational tax agenda, and road user charging. 'There's an agenda there. But one of the most important areas where there was common ground was that when we reform the tax system, we have to make it fairer to the generations that follow us.' One move under consideration is to slash income taxes for workers and fund the changes with a crackdown on super tax breaks for rich retirees. Ms Ferguson asked Chalmers if he was coming for the baby boomers. 'I wouldn't put it like that,' Chalmers said. 'If you look at the tax changes I've made already as Treasurer, that the prime minister's government has made, they've been all about making sure that when it comes to income tax cuts, for example, that those income tax cuts are made available to younger workers and women, people right up and down the income scale. 'Not just people who are already doing very well. So there's an intergenerational lens already being applied to those tax changes that we have made. 'One of the areas where the common ground was most obvious was, if and when we consider next steps in tax reform, we have to care about the intergenerational aspects and the feedback from the group today, from my point of view, is very welcome.' When asked if the government would consider asking retirees to pay tax on earnings and withdrawals to reduce the capital gains discount, Chalmers was non-committal. 'We haven't taken a decision on any of those things,' he said. 'When it comes to making superannuation tax concessions, we haven't taken any decisions to change our policies.' Chalmers said that a fairer, simpler, and more sustainable tax system was 'a matter for Cabinet', with changes possible even without a formal review. The government also asked Grattan Institute chief executive Aruna Sathanapally to deliver a speech on the tax discussion. She said retirees needed to be taxed more to relieve the income tax burden on younger workers. 'Reducing superannuation concessions so the system meets the policy objective of saving for a decent retirement, rather than being a tax shelter; introducing at least a low tax rate on earnings and withdrawals in retirement; reducing the capital gains discount; reforms to family trusts,' Ms Sathanapally said. Chalmers said tax reform could go ahead without a formal review. He said that correcting inequalities between generations was one of the tax system's most pressing challenges, and promised to ensure it better serves working people and funds essential services.

‘Ground-breaking' new phone uses AI to stop children filming and sending nude content
‘Ground-breaking' new phone uses AI to stop children filming and sending nude content

The Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Sun

‘Ground-breaking' new phone uses AI to stop children filming and sending nude content

A NEW phone uses AI to stop children filming and sending nude content. The HarmBlock+ tech in Vodafone's latest handset also prevents them seeing and saving sexual images. 1 A study by the firm found one in five secondary pupils had felt pressured into sharing explicit pictures of themselves. And of those who had, 63 per cent had them forwarded without consent. Four in ten teachers reported explicit image-sharing as a growing problem. Vodafone and Finnish firm HMD's Fuse handset uses the AI developed by UK-based SafeToNet. It is embedded into the operating system, including camera, so is impossible to bypass. Creator Richard Pursey said: 'Harmblock analyses what the camera sees, including live streams, every fraction of a second. "If it detects sexual content it instantly blocks the recording. 'HarmBlock also analyses what's being rendered to the screen. If harmful sexual content is about to appear, it's blocked. 'It means children can't be tricked into filming sexual acts, can't stumble upon pornography nor be blackmailed. "It's ground-breaking.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store