SYDNEY, April 4 (Reuters) - Australian job advertisements in newspapers and on the Internet inched ahead in March, a potential sign demand for labour had peaked after a very strong 2015.
A monthly survey by Australia and New Zealand Banking Group ANZ.AX showed total job advertisements rose 0.2 percent to 155,108 per week on average in March, from February when they fell 1.2 percent.
Ads were still 10.0 percent higher on March last year.
Internet ads rebounded by 0.4 percent in March, while newspaper ads dropped 11.4 percent. Newspaper ads have been in decline for years and account for only a fraction of the total.
"The number of job ads has been broadly unchanged for four months now, signalling an easing in hiring intentions," said ANZ senior economist Justin Fabo.
"To some extent this is unsurprising given the strong pace of jobs growth over much of 2015 and modest improvement in the unemployment rate."
Official measures of employment surprised with their strength for much of last year but have softened in the past few months. The jobless rate has been mostly steady around 6 percent, when many had thought it would rise toward 6.5 percent over time.
"Hiring is taking a breather but we expect jobs growth to maintain enough momentum over the coming six months to keep the unemployment rate within earshot of 5.75 percent," said Fabo.
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has cited the resilience of employment as an argument against the need for further cuts in interest rates, but left open the door for an easing should unemployment start to rise again.
The March jobs report is due on April 21.