Accountants among jobs to be in high demand

Demand to remain despite rapid AI progression

READ MORE: The occupations AI is set to replace soon

White collar jobs typically paying six-figures salaries are expected to be in short supply by 2030 despite 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.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.

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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.