Australian solders who died in the Middle East did not sacrifice their lives in vain, despite Afghanistan's rapid fall to the Taliban.

That's the message from former Australian ambassador to Afghanistan, Matt Anderson, to people gathered across the country for Remembrance Day.

The 103rd anniversary of the end of WW1 marked the first Remembrance Day in more than two decades where Australia was not involved in an active conflict, following allied forces' withdrawal from Afghanistan.

"Our enemies feared them, our allies revered them, and those Afghans we worked with most closely ... asked for the Australians to return," the ambassador turned Australian War Memorial director told a service in Canberra on Thursday.

"You can learn a lot about a country by understanding what it's prepared to fight for.

"You can learn even more from what its sons and daughters are prepared to die for."

Afghanistan fell rapidly to the Taliban in August after a near 20-year occupation by Western forces. Australia withdrew in June.

Reiterating the words of a chaplain who ministered to troops in Afghanistan, Mr Anderson described success as "the people we bring home and hopefully the pride they have in the job they have done".

Governor-General David Hurley attended Canberra's national service, while Veterans' Affairs Minister Andrew Gee and Labor senator Katy Gallagher laid wreaths on behalf of the prime minster and opposition leader, respectively.

"From those who fought on the Western Front more than a hundred years ago to those still serving abroad today, we must continue to acknowledge their service and sacrifice," Mr Gee said.

In Melbourne, Scott Morrison paid tribute to servicemen and women, describing it as a day of "profound reflection".

"Remembrance Day is a day to honour veterans. It doesn't matter which battle, which conflict - the same uniform has been worn," the prime minister told veterans.

"The same honour has been lived up to. We are safer today because of your efforts, we are free today because of your efforts."

Labor leader Anthony Albanese marked the day at a ceremony at Balmain in Sydney, stressing Australia had a responsibility to look after those who fought.

"We have a sacred responsibility to care for those who volunteer to defend us even now," he said.

"Many never come home the same, their old selves left behind forever on a distant battlefield. Many never come home."

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Next year's packed women's rugby league calendar has put women's State of Origin expansion ambitions on hold but the Queensland Rugby League is hopeful of multi-match campaign in 2023.

After being postponed due to the COVID pandemic, the 2021 NRLW season will now be played in 2022 before the women's Origin in June.

The 2022 NRLW season is then slated to be played later in the year with the possibility of a women's World Cup as well.

That schedule means expanding the Origin series beyond one match will have to wait for 12 months at least.

The QRL announced on Thursday it would be giving its women's players in 2022 equal match payments to the men's team and chief executive Rohan Sawyer said that move wouldn't dissuade them from seeking an expanded women's Origin campaign.

"We're looking at '23 now and how we expand that potentially to two games and then ultimately to three games," Sawyer said.

"Our view is obviously as we move through an expanded series that we look to pay our players and our staff to make sure we renumerate them for the work that they do.

"That is something that we'd have a look at to make sure that whatever work they're doing for us, it's on a pay scale that fits."

Queensland women's coach Tahnee Norris said the pay decision opened a pathway to expanding the campaign beyond a one-match series.

"If we went to a three game series too early, we wouldn't have been able to get the players for those three games because it would have been too much pressure on them work-wise to actually commit to that sort of thing," Norris said.

"Now it's a real conversation to have.

"We really want to go to that three game series. We can afford to do that now.

"The girls can take the time off work because we can actually compensate them for that.

"That's definitely the conversation that needs to be had."

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Australia's unemployment rate unexpectedly jumped to 5.2 per cent in October as the nation's powerhouse states prepared to emerge from coronavirus restrictions and people started looking for work again.

The number of people employed fell by 46,300 when economists had expected a 50,000 rise.

The participation rate of people in or seeking employment rose to 64.7 per cent in October compared with 64.5 per cent the previous month.

It was the first increase in the participation rate since June.

The jobless rate was 4.6 per cent in September, after striking a 13-year low of 4.5 per cent in August, but this was more to do with people leaving the workforce rather than indicating a strong labour market.

Employment Minister Stuart Robert said the figures continued to reflect the negative impact the COVID-19 pandemic and related lockdowns had on labour market activity.

"That said, the Australian labour market is set for a strong recovery, with payroll jobs already rebounding and job advertisements surging to a 13-year high," he said in a statement.

The increase in unemployment showed that people were preparing to get back to work, Australian Bureau of Statistics head of labour statistics Bjorn Jarvis said.

"And increasingly available and actively looking for work - particularly in NSW, Victoria and the ACT," he said.

"This follows what we have seen towards the end of other major lockdowns, including the one in Victoria late last year."

ANZ senior economist Catherine Birch said the unemployment rate could be a bit bumpy in the coming months, depending on the relative pace of the recoveries in employment and participation.

"But we expect to see a solid fall in unemployment to around four per cent by end-2022," she said.

Earlier, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg attended a virtual meeting of the finance ministers from the Five Eyes intelligence alliance - Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the UK and the US - hosted by US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.

"Today's meeting was an important opportunity to swap notes on how our nations are responding to COVID-19 and to secure our recovery from the greatest economic shock since the Great Depression," Mr Frydenberg said.

"Importantly, I was able to share how our economy is coming back strongly from the most recent Delta-induced lockdowns with business and consumer confidence up and the unemployment rate remaining low."

© AAP 2021

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg is optimistic the Australian economy has already turned the corner despite new figures showing the jobless rate unexpectedly spiking above five per cent in October.

The unemployment rate jumped to 5.2 per cent from 4.6 per cent in September, while the Australian Bureau of Statistics said a further 46,300 jobs were lost in October, making a total of over 330,000 in the past three months.

The survey period was September 26 to October 9 and did not capture the ending of COVID-19 restrictions in NSW and Victoria.

Mr Frydenberg says the latest jobs figures were collected when more than half the country was in lockdown.

"Since that data was taken more than a month ago the economy has turned the corner," Mr Frydenberg told reporters in Melbourne on Thursday.

"Importantly, the Reserve Bank is expecting unemployment to be below five per cent by year end and then to stay in the fours for some time."

The steep rise in the jobless came as the nation's powerhouse states prepared to emerge from coronavirus restrictions and people started looking for work again.

The participation rate of people in or seeking employment rose to 64.7 per cent in October compared with 64.5 per cent the previous month.

It was the first increase in the participation rate since June.

Employment Minister Stuart Robert said the figures continued to reflect the negative impact the COVID-19 pandemic and related lockdowns had on labour market activity.

"That said, the Australian labour market is set for a strong recovery, with payroll jobs already rebounding and job advertisements surging to a 13-year high," he said in a statement.

ABS head of labour statistics Bjorn Jarvis said the increase in unemployment showed people were preparing to get back to work, particularly in NSW, Victoria and the ACT.

"This follows what we have seen towards the end of other major lockdowns, including the one in Victoria late last year," he said.

Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry said the growth in the participation rate is particularly promising given businesses of every size, across every industry, are facing increasingly severe labour and skills shortages.

"With vacancies climbing day by day, the sooner we can get workers back into employment the better," ACCI chief executive Andrew McKellar told AAP.

ANZ senior economist Catherine Birch said the unemployment rate could be a bit bumpy in the coming months, depending on the relative pace of the recoveries in employment and participation.

"But we expect to see a solid fall in unemployment to around four per cent by end-2022," she said.

Earlier in the day, Mr Frydenberg attended a virtual meeting of the finance ministers from the Five Eyes intelligence alliance - Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the UK and the US - hosted by US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.

"Today's meeting was an important opportunity to swap notes on how our nations are responding to COVID-19 and to secure our recovery from the greatest economic shock since the Great Depression," Mr Frydenberg said.

"Importantly, I was able to share how our economy is coming back strongly from the most recent Delta-induced lockdowns."

© AAP 2021