The share of Australian gross domestic product going into workers' pockets has hit a record low, according to a new report.

The Australia Institute analysis shows the 46.2 per cent share of GDP in the March quarter was the lowest recorded since the Australian Bureau of Statistics started collecting the data in 1959.

It comes as Australia grabbed the record for the longest run of uninterrupted growth in the developed world from the Netherlands last week, recording its 103rd straight quarter without going into a technical recession.

Jim Stanford, economist and director of the Australia Institute's Centre for Future Work said the relationship between growing GDP and growing labour compensation has been weaker in the past year than at any other time on record.