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Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C)

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4.2
  • 1,000 - 50,000 employees

Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences Graduate Program (Feb 2025)

Location details

On-site

  • Australia

    Australia

    • Australian Capital Territory

      Canberra

Remote

Canberra

  • Australia

    Australia

    Remote work

    • Australian Capital Territory

      Canberra

Location

Canberra, Canberra

Opportunity expired

Opportunity details

  • Opportunity typeGraduate Job or Program
  • SalaryAUD 74,264 - 88,887 / Year
  • Additional benefits15.4% superannuation and potential advancement after 6 months to the APS4 salary
  • Number of vacancies25-35 vacancies
  • Application open dateApply by 3 Apr 2024
  • Start dateStart date 9 Feb 2025 - 12 Feb 2026

If you have recently graduated in Humanities, Arts or Social Sciences from university then we want you to apply for the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C) Graduate Program. PM&C will give you the opportunity work across an exciting and broad range of areas that aren’t available anywhere else – it’s a mini public service rolled into one! If you you’re keen to explore a broad range of opportunities, then there’s no better place to start your career. 

What we provide 

  • 12-month, multiple award-winning graduate program where you choose where you go
  • Excellent support including mentors, buddies and networking opportunities to connect with countless business areas
  • A starting APS3 salary of $74,264 + 15.4% superannuation and potential advancement after 6 months to the APS4 salary 
  • Inspiring and diverse work opportunities so that you can tailor your program to suit your goals
  • Work-life balance including flexible working from home arrangements and generous leave entitlements
  • Career progression to a permanent placement of your choice and possibility of future promotion
  • Generous relocation package to support your move to Canberra
  • A work culture that respects opinions and fosters inclusion and diversity

What you’ll do   

If you majored in various areas of interest across arts, humanities and social sciences then this is the career for you. We have a broad range of cross-cutting priorities spanning through domestic policy, social policy, women’s, crisis management, health, aged care and the environment. You will have the opportunity to provide frank and impartial advice on Commonwealth policy proposals, intergovernmental agreements and major funding agreements, and support the implementation of the federal relations architecture, and liaise directly with state and territory First Ministers’ Departments.  Some examples of these priorities you could be involved in include: 

  • Driving reform in whole-of-Australian Government crisis management arrangements to position Government to coordinate responses to increasing and emerging hazard threats
  • Working closely with other departments to provide gender analysis and policy advice on topics including paid parental leave, early childhood education and care, income support, housing, and employment and workplace relations
  • Implementation of Australia’s climate change and energy transition policies, including the Powering Australia Plan
  • Providing advice to the Prime Minister to deliver the Government’s agenda for a sustainable, resilient Australia by promoting a coordinated policy approach to resilience, and to disaster risk reduction across the built, natural, social and economic domains
  • Support the delivery of the APEC Policy Partnership for Women and the Economy, which Australia is chairing in 2024!
  • Commission of the Status of Women in the United Nations

Work with key stakeholders to provide cabinet submissions covering:

  • Population health – chronic disease, preventative health, alcohol and drugs
  • Primary care – Medicare, pharmaceuticals
  • Health workforce – shortages, education and training
  • Sport – Brisbane 2032 Olympics, community sport

Who we’re looking for? 

PM&C graduates come from a variety of academic disciplines with diverse experiences and backgrounds. You will relish working in a fast paced and challenging environment and enjoy adapting to new circumstances and priorities as the Prime Minister delivers them. 

To succeed in our program, you need to be curious, motivated and driven to make a difference to the future of our country. You will work both independently and as part of a team, enjoy problem solving, collaborating and offer innovative and creative thinking, approaches and insights. 

Who can apply?

To be eligible to apply, you must have completed your university degree within the last eight years or be in your final year of study.  

The program starts in February 2025 and you must be willing to relocate to Canberra. You also must be an Australian citizen and willing to undergo police, character and health checks as required.

Please note that application dates are approximate.

Next steps    

If this sounds like the perfect opportunity for you, we encourage you to apply today. 

To find out more, please visit our website.

Work rights

The opportunity is available to applicants in any of the following categories.

Work light flag
Australia
Australian Citizen

Qualifications & other requirements

You should have or be completing the following to apply for this opportunity.

Degree or Certificate
Qualification level
Qualification level
Bachelor or higher
Study field
Study field (any)

Hiring criteria

  • Experience requirementNo experience required
  • Working rights
    Australian Citizen
  • Study fields
    Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences
  • Degree typesBachelor or higher
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Reviews

user
Graduate
Canberra
5 months ago

Mostly engaging with stakeholders and other teams in the department

user
Graduate
Canberra
5 months ago

A day in the life of an Adviser at PM&C will involve working on several different work items, often to short timeframes. The work could include writing briefs for senior decision-makers to meeting, meeting with other agencies to discuss work progress, contributing to Cabinet processes, providing policy advice on your subject area to other internal teams, making corporate contributions through the PM&C Social Club or employee Networks, and working with highly intelligent and experienced colleagues from all walks of life.

user
Graduate
Canberra
a year ago

Varied roles, but often similar basic tasks such as answering correspondence, responding to tight turnaround consults by other work areas, writing briefs for various classifications above you (director, (First) Assistant Secretary, Deputy Secretary, Secretary, Prime Minister, Assistant PM, Prime Minister's Office (PMO)), preparing meetings, research and analysis tasks, working toward long-term projects

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About the employer

logo-dep-of-prime-minister-480x480-2024.jpg

Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C)

Rating

4.2

Number of employees

1,000 - 50,000 employees

Industries

Government & Public Service

We are the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, or PM&C for short. Our role is to provide fresh thinking and sound advice to government.

Pros and cons of working at Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C)

Pros

  • The best thing about PM&C is by far the visibility provided over the entire remit of Government work.

  • Being exposed to the Cabinet process, great people.

  • PM&C has an excellent culture which filters from senior leadership all the way to lower APS classifications.

  • Flexible working is supported, and many colleagues work their preferred hours, work from home at least one day per week, or have other arrangements.

  • The promotion opportunities at PM&C are various, and there are often internal EOIs going which allows everyone to move internally at will.

Cons

    • The turnaround time for pieces of work is often very short generally ranging from a fortnight to less than an hour.

    • PM&C owns very little policy and you will not develop experience in carrying a policy, project, or initiative from inception to implementation.

    • Having to relocate for it.

    • The speed interview stage was definitely the most challenging.

    • The pay might be considered a bit below market value for certain roles or work areas.