Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Jobless Rate Hits Near 22-year High, Ahead Of Nova Scotia For First Time

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Aug, 2016 01:29 PM
    CALGARY — Alberta's monthly unemployment rate climbed to its highest level in nearly 22 years in July, marking the first time the province has had a worse jobless rate than Nova Scotia, Statistics Canada said Friday.
     
    The federal agency reported that Alberta's rate rose to 8.6 per cent last month — the highest since September 1994 — from 7.9 per cent in June.
     
    That's above the 8.4 per cent July unemployment rate in Nova Scotia, the first time Alberta has had a higher rate since Statistics Canada started collecting the data in 1976.
     
    "Obviously, Nova Scotia's unemployment rate has improved in recent years," said BMO chief economist Doug Porter. "This isn't entirely a bad news story, but it's largely a bad news story because of the upswing in Alberta."
     
    The unemployment picture in Alberta may even be worse than known, he added. Due to the ongoing fallout from the Fort McMurray wildfires in May that led to the evacuation of 90,000 residents, Statistics Canada said it was unable to conduct its labour force survey there in May, June and July, and had to estimate values based on nearby regions.
     
    "The jobless numbers really speak to the prolonged drop in the global price of oil and the serious consequences that that is having for Alberta's economy and Alberta's families," said provincial Labour Minister Christina Gray in an interview.
     
    She said the NDP government is committed to economic diversification and promoting job creation but won't waver on initiatives including higher carbon taxes and increasing minimum wage despite criticism by some business groups that they will further weaken the economy.
     
     
    In Calgary, the oil and gas capital of Canada, the unemployment rate of 8.6 per cent was the worst among 33 Canadian metropolitan areas surveyed. Edmonton's unemployment rate of 7.7 per cent was the sixth highest.
     
    Alberta has lost 49,000 jobs compared to July 2015, when the jobless rate was 6.2 per cent, Statistics Canada found.
     
    Calgary-based economist Todd Hirsch of ATB Financial said Alberta is stuck in an energy price recession that is "still grinding on."
     
    "We saw those oil prices, they tried to claw their way back up above $50 early in the summer, but that's all kind of unwound itself now," he said. "So my guess is we're going to be in for a few more months here of rising unemployment."
     
     
    He added that although Alberta shed jobs for the fourth consecutive month, the increase in the unemployment rate was mainly caused by 17,600 more people entering the jobs market. He said displaced Fort McMurray residents looking for work in Edmonton or Calgary may have been partly responsible for that.
     
    Statistics Canada reported the province lost 10,600 full-time jobs and gained 9,100 part-time jobs in July compared with June.
     
    Despite the early summer oil price rally, the Petroleum Services Association of Canada said last week it would not change its forecast for about 1,900 oil and gas wells to be drilled in Alberta this year, down from more than 2,800 last year.
     
    "The entire sector is suffering and the trickle-down effects are rippling out to other areas of the economy which are feeling the pinch, too," said PSAC CEO Mark Salkeld in a statement.
     
    "The number of petroleum services companies that have, or are in danger of, closing their doors forever is growing and the thousands of workers who lost their jobs are looking at every industry, every opportunity to find work."
     
     
    A TD Bank report released last month estimates Alberta's economy will contract by 6.5 per cent over 2015 and 2016, making the economic downturn deeper than any going back to the early 1980s.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No Breaks From B.C.'s New Tax For Foreign Property Buyers With Deals: Minister

    No Breaks From B.C.'s New Tax For Foreign Property Buyers With Deals: Minister
    The tax takes effect next Tuesday and long-term contracts, such as pre-sale agreements for condos under construction, and pending property purchases involving foreign buyers will pay the new 15-per-cent tax.

    No Breaks From B.C.'s New Tax For Foreign Property Buyers With Deals: Minister

    Langley, B.C. Man Who Planned Arsons, Shootings At Family Homes To Be Sentenced

    Langley, B.C. Man Who Planned Arsons, Shootings At Family Homes To Be Sentenced
    Forty-three-year-old Vincent Cheung of Langley, B.C., pleaded guilty last week to 18 of 23 charges including arson and firearms offences stemming from attacks on 15 families in 2011 and 2012.

    Langley, B.C. Man Who Planned Arsons, Shootings At Family Homes To Be Sentenced

    Theft Of 8-Yr-Old Girl's iPad Results In The Arrest Of A Richmond Man

    Theft Of 8-Yr-Old Girl's iPad Results In The Arrest Of A Richmond Man
      The suspect, a 22 year old Richmond man who is previously known to police, opened his bag and relinquished the iPad to police. 

    Theft Of 8-Yr-Old Girl's iPad Results In The Arrest Of A Richmond Man

    B.C. Wants Federal Crackdown On Fentanyl Trafficking To Fight Health Emergency

    Premier Christy Clark wants the federal government to restrict access to devices, such as pill presses and tableting machines, and to pursue stronger penalties against people who import and traffic in fentanyl.

    B.C. Wants Federal Crackdown On Fentanyl Trafficking To Fight Health Emergency

    Jatinder 'Michael' Sandhu, Killed In Surrey Shooting Is Victim Of Mistaken Identity

    Jatinder 'Michael' Sandhu, Killed In Surrey Shooting Is Victim Of Mistaken Identity
    This is not a drug hit, not a gang-related hit, this is mistaken identity of an innocent victim

    Jatinder 'Michael' Sandhu, Killed In Surrey Shooting Is Victim Of Mistaken Identity

    Regulator Requires Banks To Conduct Stress Tests For Vancouver, Toronto Home Prices

    Regulator Requires Banks To Conduct Stress Tests For Vancouver, Toronto Home Prices
    Canada's banking regulator is requiring banks to conduct stress tests to determine how they would deal with a 50 per cent downturn in Vancouver real estate prices and a 40 per cent cut in Toronto home prices.

    Regulator Requires Banks To Conduct Stress Tests For Vancouver, Toronto Home Prices