Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Full-time Work Faded In 2016 As Labour Market Rode Wave Of Part-time Jobs

The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2017 12:57 PM
    OTTAWA — The national labour market saw big gains in 2016, but unlike recent years the net job growth was propelled by a surge in the less-desirable category of part-time work.
     
    Statistics Canada's year-end employment review Friday said the country added 153,700 net new part-time jobs last year and just 60,400 full-time positions — a number so low it was statistically insignificant.
     
    The 2016 figure represents a stark shift from year-end results in the past two years, when the agency reported gains of 156,000 full-time jobs in 2014 and 147,000 in 2015.
     
    The final number for last year would have shown a loss in full-time work had it not been for a December boost of 81,300 new positions in the category — the biggest one-month increase in full-time jobs in almost five years.
     
    Overall, the workforce bulked up by 214,100 net new jobs in 2016 as employment across the country increased by 1.2 per cent compared to the year before. It was the strongest number for annual job growth since 2012.
     
    The year-end data also showed that job-market performance was different depending on the sector.
     
    The labour force shed 61,600 net jobs in goods-producing industries in 2016, while services sectors expanded by 275,800 positions.
     
    On a monthly basis, the agency's latest labour force survey said that, overall, Canada beat economists' expectations in December by adding 53,700 net jobs. The unemployment rate last month crept up to 6.9 per cent from 6.8 per cent.
     
    A consensus of economists had projected the economy would remain flat last month and for the jobless rate to rise to 6.9 per cent, according to Thomson Reuters.
     
    Statistics Canada also released numbers Friday that showed the country's trade balance with the world in November recorded its first monthly surplus in over two years.
     
    The agency said exports rose 4.3 per cent, mostly due to an increase in sales of metal and non-metallic mineral products and record exports to countries other than the United States.
     
    Exports to countries other than the U.S. increased 9.5 per cent to hit a record $12 billion, beating the previous record set in December 2011, the agency said.
     
    It was the biggest monthly percentage increase since May 2008, the report added.
     
    Imports, meanwhile, were up 0.7 per cent in November as Canada brought in more energy products.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hundreds Of Veterans Likely Affected By Federal Cuts To Medicinal Pot Allotment

    Hundreds Of Veterans Likely Affected By Federal Cuts To Medicinal Pot Allotment
    OTTAWA — Almost three-quarters of veterans using medical marijuana will feel the impact this spring when the federal government imposes a new limit on the amount of weed for which it will pay.

    Hundreds Of Veterans Likely Affected By Federal Cuts To Medicinal Pot Allotment

    Oldest Known Member Of Southern B.C. Killer Whale Pod Believed Dead

    Oldest Known Member Of Southern B.C. Killer Whale Pod Believed Dead
    VANCOUVER — The death of a whale considered the oldest in the West Coast's southern resident population could particularly affect one animal who may have lost yet another adoptive mother, a wildlife biologist says.

    Oldest Known Member Of Southern B.C. Killer Whale Pod Believed Dead

    RCMP Investigating Body Found In Parking Lot Of Nanaimo Business

    RCMP Investigating Body Found In Parking Lot Of Nanaimo Business
    NANAIMO, B.C. — RCMP says its investigating the death of a man in Nanaimo, B.C.

    RCMP Investigating Body Found In Parking Lot Of Nanaimo Business

    Family Of Lion Dancers Ready To Roar At Vancouver's Chinatown Spring Festival

    Family Of Lion Dancers Ready To Roar At Vancouver's Chinatown Spring Festival
    VANCOUVER — After Jun Ing performed as a lion dancer for the first time in Vancouver's Chinese New Year parade in the 1980s, he remembers wishing it had lasted longer.

    Family Of Lion Dancers Ready To Roar At Vancouver's Chinatown Spring Festival

    Snow Causes Problems In Manitoba, Extreme Cold Warning Lifted In Saskatchewan

    The main highway from Winnipeg to the U-S border has reopened in southern Manitoba.

    Snow Causes Problems In Manitoba, Extreme Cold Warning Lifted In Saskatchewan

    Former Four-Term Victoria Mayor Peter Pollen Dies Peacefully At Home

    Former Four-Term Victoria Mayor Peter Pollen Dies Peacefully At Home
    VICTORIA — Former Victoria mayor Peter Pollen has died at the age of 89.

    Former Four-Term Victoria Mayor Peter Pollen Dies Peacefully At Home