Reuters have collated some responses to the data (data is here)
Ton Kennedy, economist JP Morgan:
"Employment growth is not good - full-time down a lot, part-time up a lot. You're not going to see too much volatility in the jobless rate, but you should look at things like underemployment and wage growth. They are likely to remain elevated in the case of the former and very low in the case of wages. That's not a good outcome. "I don't think this will really force the RBA's hand in the near term - just because the unemployment rate of 5.6 percent looks good."
Annette Beacher, head of Asia-Apcific research TD Securities:
"The numbers are rubbish. No one is going to believe these numbers. The massive shifts in full-time/part-time is very easy to discount. It's the sort of irregularities seen in recent months. The RBA will look at this and say 'let's see and wait what happens next month.' It could be a weak number but it just justifies the RBA stand. The labour market is mixed. I see rates on hold."