Close X
Friday, September 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Economists question new August job numbers after last month's botched effort

Steve Rennie, Darpan, 05 Sep, 2014 12:40 PM
    OTTAWA - Canada's economy unexpectedly shed jobs in August due to heavy losses in the private sector, raising the eyebrows of economists who widely expected a modest gain in Statistics Canada's flagship monthly report.
     
    The national statistical agency reported Friday that the economy lost 11,000 mostly part-time jobs in August, with the unemployment rate remaining unchanged from the previous month at 7.0 per cent. Economists had expected a net gain of about 10,000 jobs.
     
    A whopping loss of 112,000 jobs in the private sector was only partly offset by more people turning to self-employment and the continued delivery of jobs in the public sector.
     
    But some economists, uneasy after Statistics Canada badly botched its July job numbers, raised concerns about the latest figures.
     
    The country's national number-cruncher was forced to issue a major correction to its employment survey last month after wrongly reporting that the economy gained a paltry 200 jobs in July. That number, Canadians found out a week later, was actually supposed to be 42,000. Statistics Canada blamed a computer error.
     
    This time around, some economists were skeptical about the staggering job losses in the private sector and equally surprising gains in the number of self-employed people.
     
    "Guess what? We again advise clients to be very careful with the Canadian jobs numbers," Scotiabank economists Derek Holt and Dov Zigler wrote in a note to clients.
     
    They pointed out there has never been a bigger month-on-month rise in the number of self-employed people, or drop in private-sector jobs, since Statistics Canada started the labour force survey back in 1976. That those record-level monthly gains and losses just happened to almost cancel each other out in the August jobs' report seemed "very fishy" to the Scotiabank economists.
     
    "What an utterly fascinating pair of coincidences," wrote Holt and Zigler.
     
     
    "A data quality/sampling issue may be in play again here as I just can't believe such volatility in either number."
     
    In response, Statistics Canada said it does not comment "on the opinions or comments made by individuals outside of the agency."
     
    Finance Minister Joe Oliver replied with a terse "yes, I am" when asked Friday if he is still confident in the quality of Statistics Canada's data.
     
    Still, last month's statistical snafu has only served to amplify the concerns held by some economists about what they perceive to be a great degree of volatility from one month's job numbers to the next. Some now prefer to look at averages over three, six and 12 months, rather than at the latest monthly job numbers.
     
    The Canadian dollar was down slightly Friday in response to the weak job numbers.
     
    "After a string of solid economic reports, Canadian employment delivered yet another shocker, with no computer error to blame this time," CIBC chief economist Avery Shenfeld said.
     
    "All told, soft numbers that will at least take a bit of a shine off what has been an improving picture for Canada, particularly given softer than expected readings today out of the U.S."
     
    Employment rose in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, but fell in Newfoundland and Labrador and Alberta — which, to one economist at least, was a sign that Canada's economy struggled to churn out jobs.
     
    "The fact that private sector payrolls are unchanged from a year ago, and now even Alberta appears to be cooling a tad,tells us all we need to know about the sluggish state of Canada's job market," said Doug Porter, chief economist with BMO Capital Markets.
     
    "The offset is that productivity is now stepping into the void, and helping keep overall economic growth on track."
     
     
    Canada's gross domestic product is still on track to grow more in 2014 than it has in the past two years, added Porter, who says "productivity is what circles that square."
     
    That puts no added pressure on Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz to tinker with interest rates.
     
    On Wednesday, the central bank held its key interest rate steady at one per cent, indicating it does not foresee enough of a change in Canada's economic fortunes to adjust the rate from the same level it has held for the last four years.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save caribou

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save caribou
    HINTON, Alta. - Scientists studying the ravaged caribou habitat of Alberta's northwestern foothills say they have found so much disturbance from decades of industrial...

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save caribou

    Firefighters Rescue Woman in North Vancouver Park who fell into Creek

    Firefighters Rescue Woman in North Vancouver Park who fell into Creek
    NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. - North Vancouver firefighters are retrieving a 20-year-old woman who fell in Lynn Canyon Park.

    Firefighters Rescue Woman in North Vancouver Park who fell into Creek

    Shale gas industry needs more study, Justin Trudeau says in New Brunswick

    Shale gas industry needs more study, Justin Trudeau says in New Brunswick
    MONCTON, N.B. - Greater scientific study is required before Canada expands its shale gas industry, federal Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said Saturday while campaigning alongside his provincial counterpart in New Brunswick.

    Shale gas industry needs more study, Justin Trudeau says in New Brunswick

    Authorities says smoke from B.C. wildfires is expected to cloud Vancouver Island

    Authorities says smoke from B.C. wildfires is expected to cloud Vancouver Island
    VANCOUVER - Winds are blowing smoke from large B.C. wildfires in the interior towards the central coast and northern Vancouver Island.

    Authorities says smoke from B.C. wildfires is expected to cloud Vancouver Island

    PM Harper on wrong side of history in opposition to aboriginal inquiry: Justin Trudeau

    PM Harper on wrong side of history in opposition to aboriginal inquiry: Justin Trudeau
    MONCTON, N.B. - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is "on the wrong side of history" in his refusal to launch a public inquiry to study the high number of missing and murdered aboriginal women, federal Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said Saturday.

    PM Harper on wrong side of history in opposition to aboriginal inquiry: Justin Trudeau

    PM Harper continues annual northern tour with stops in Cambridge Bay, Pond Inlet

    PM Harper continues annual northern tour with stops in Cambridge Bay, Pond Inlet
    CAMBRIDGE BAY, Nunavut - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, today as he continues his annual tour of Canada's North.

    PM Harper continues annual northern tour with stops in Cambridge Bay, Pond Inlet