Health Care and Social Assistance: Understanding Australia's Largest Industry
With 2.39 million workers — 16.2% of Australia's workforce — Health Care and Social Assistance is the nation's largest employing industry. Here's how it works, who the key players are, and what challenges it faces.
Executive Summary
Australia's health system is jointly run by federal, state/territory, and local governments — a complex arrangement that can confuse even those working in it. Medicare provides universal access to public hospitals and subsidised GP visits. The Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme makes medicines affordable. Private health insurance covers the gap.
The industry employs more people than retail and construction combined. Registered nurses are the largest occupation, followed by aged and disabled carers. The workforce is 75.8% female and 43.4% part-time — the highest part-time share of any major industry.
The system faces significant pressure: an ageing population, workforce shortages, administrative burden that pulls clinicians away from patient care, and fragmented coordination between providers. Understanding this landscape is essential for anyone building solutions for healthcare.
By the Numbers
Industry snapshot from November 2025
Health Care and Social Assistance has grown faster than almost any other industry over the past two decades. Employment has increased by 1.15 million workers (+92%) since 2005, driven by population growth, ageing demographics, and the expansion of government-funded programs like the NDIS.
| Sector | Employed | Share of Industry |
|---|---|---|
Hospitals | 627K | 26.2% |
Social Assistance Services | 555K | 23.2% |
Allied Health Services | 327K | 13.7% |
Residential Care Services | 289K | 12.1% |
Medical Services | 238K | 10.0% |
Child Care Services | 182K | 7.6% |
Pathology & Diagnostic Imaging | 72K | 3.0% |
Source: ABS Labour Force Survey, November 2025 (JSA trend data)
How the Australian Health System Works
Governance, services, and the flow of funding
Australia's health system is a hybrid of public and private provision, funded through taxes, insurance premiums, and out-of-pocket payments. The Federal Government manages Medicare and the PBS, regulates medicines and practitioners, and funds aged care. State and Territory Governments run public hospitals, ambulance services, and community mental health. 31 Primary Health Networks coordinate care at the regional level.
The diagram below shows how these layers connect. Click any element to learn more about its role in the system.
Click any element to learn more about its role in the Australian health system
Who Works in Healthcare?
The workforce behind the system
The healthcare workforce is diverse — from surgeons and psychiatrists to aged care workers and child carers. Registered Nurses are the largest occupation, reflecting the central role nursing plays in hospitals, aged care, and community health.
Top 10 Employing Occupations
The workforce skews heavily female (75.8%) and part-time (43.4%). Median earnings are $1,689 per week — slightly below the all-industries median of $1,741. The median age is 40, and many workers enter healthcare as a second career.
The Challenges Facing Healthcare
Pressure points in the system
Despite being well-funded by global standards, Australia's health system faces significant structural challenges. These aren't just policy debates — they affect everyday operational reality for anyone working in or building solutions for healthcare.
Ageing Population
Australia's population is ageing rapidly. By 2057, over 8.8 million Australians will be aged 65+. This increases demand for aged care, chronic disease management, and a workforce that can deliver flexible, person-centred care.
Workforce Shortages
Critical shortages exist in nursing, aged care, mental health, and rural/regional areas. The sector needs to attract, train, and retain hundreds of thousands more workers over the next decade.
Administrative Burden
Clinicians report spending 30-60% of their time on documentation, compliance, and administrative tasks instead of direct patient care. This contributes to burnout and reduces system capacity.
System Fragmentation
Poor coordination between GPs, hospitals, specialists, and aged care leads to duplicated tests, delayed referrals, and gaps in care. Patients often fall through the cracks during transitions.
Rising Costs
Health spending is ~10% of GDP and growing. New technologies, medicines, and an ageing population push costs up, while governments face pressure to contain spending.
References & Further Reading
Sources used in this analysis
Primary Sources
- Jobs and Skills Australia — Health Care and Social Assistance Industry Profile Link
- Department of Health — The Australian Health System Link
- AIHW — Australia's Health 2024 (In Brief) Link
- Australian Medical Association — Vision for Australia's Health 2024-27 Link
- Business.gov.au — Health Care and Social Assistance Link
- Healthdirect — Australia's Healthcare System Link
- Australian Commission on Safety and Quality — National Standards Link
- Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association — AHHA Link
- Australian Bureau of Statistics — Health Care Workforce Link
Key Organisations
Related Reading
- The Agentic AI Transformation — What companies are building with AI agents
- BPMN Complete Guide — How to model business processes
Building for Healthcare?
We help organisations understand healthcare workflows and build practical solutions. If you're working on scheduling, intake, claims, compliance, or coordination challenges — let's talk.
Start a ConversationThis article reflects publicly available information about Australia's healthcare industry as of February 2026. Employment data from ABS Labour Force Survey (November 2025).