Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Unemployment Rate Down After Country Adds 54,000 Jobs In September, Statcan Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Oct, 2019 09:48 PM

    OTTAWA - Canada's unemployment rate nudged down to a near four-decade low last month as the economy added more jobs than analysts expected — dropping an economic figure into a tight electoral race, and warnings from economists that things may not be as rosy as they seem.

     

    Statistics Canada's monthly labour force survey showed the country added about 54,000 net new jobs in September, driven largely by gains in full-time work, and dropping the jobless rate nationally by 0.2 points to 5.5 per cent.

     

    The numbers surpassed analysts' expectations of a gain of 10,000 jobs, according to financial markets data firm Refinitiv, after an August jump of 81,000.

     

    The national statistics office said September's jobs growth was largely concentrated in an expansion of public-sector staff and self-employed workers. The report also said 70,000 of the new jobs were full-time, as the number of part-time workers declined.

     

    The survey also said that young workers aged 15 to 24 years old saw drops in the ranks of full- and part-time workers, inching their unemployment rate to 11.9 per cent — not all that dissimilar from the same time one year ago.

     

    Compared with a year earlier, the numbers show Canada added 456,000 jobs, for an increase of 2.4 per cent, and average hourly wages, too, were up about 4.3 per cent from the same time in 2018.

     

    "Canada's labour market has really been on a tear over the last year — job growth has been very strong," said Josh Nye, senior economist with RBC Economics.

     

    "Unemployment is low, wages are starting to pick up. Wage growth was really the missing ingredient in what looked like a pretty strong labour market backdrop last year."

     

    Even though year-over-year private sector jobs were up, the month-over-month numbers for private-sector employment were down by 21,000. More health-care sector and education workers drove overall job gains.

     

    Stephen Brown, senior Canada economist with Capital Economics, said the growth in public services and self-employment may suggest the economy is not as dynamic as the high-level numbers make it out to be.

     

    "It's still an encouraging thing that unemployment is falling, and certainly it suggests we're not on the cusp of a serious downturn in the economy," Brown said.

     

    "But it's maybe not quite what we would want to see if we could have our ideal jobs report."

     

    BMO chief economist Doug Porter said that despite the rock-solid growth in job numbers over the last year, the broader economy remains lacklustre with year-over-year GDP growth crawling along at 1.3 per cent.

     

    "We're getting the jobs gains, but it's not really translating into the big gains in spending or the broader economy in terms of overall output gains," Porter said.

     

    "So I wouldn't say the overall picture is entirely rosy, but it's still I'd regard as encouraging that we're continuing to churn out job increases."

     

    Avery Shenfeld, chief economist with CIBC Capital Markets, said in a note that the low jobless rate will likely cement the case for the Bank of Canada to hold its trend-setting interest rate in the short-term.

     

    But he warned that economists will keep an eye towards any data over the rest of the year suggesting a global slowdown is lapping up on Canada's economic shores.

     

    With days before voting day, the federal Liberals pounced on the high-level numbers to push their re-election bid. Likewise, the Ontario Progressive Conservatives — whom Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau has used as a foil during the federal campaign — also took credit for the 41,000 jobs created in the province in September.

     

    In an online analysis of labour force survey data for the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, economist Jim Stanford wrote the job market has fared well during the Trudeau Liberals' time in office, although didn't do as well on two measures — the employment rate and job creation rate — as Jean Chretien's Liberal did during his terms as prime minister.

     

    Stanford, the Harold Innis Industry Professor of Economics at McMaster University, wrote that federal income-support programs like the Canada Child Benefit among other measures have contributed to the labour market performance.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fredericton Abortion Clinic To Close, Citing Lack Of Government Funding

    Fredericton Abortion Clinic To Close, Citing Lack Of Government Funding
    FREDERICTON - The only abortion clinic in Fredericton says it's closing due to a lack of funding.

    Fredericton Abortion Clinic To Close, Citing Lack Of Government Funding

    B.C. Civilian Agency Investigating Fire Started After Man Hit With Stun Gun

    B.C. Civilian Agency Investigating Fire Started After Man Hit With Stun Gun
    A statement from the Independent Investigations Office says it happened on Oct. 6, in a busy pedestrian area along the downtown Vancouver waterfront.    

    B.C. Civilian Agency Investigating Fire Started After Man Hit With Stun Gun

    Charity Calls On Ottawa To Rescue 25 Canadian Kids Trapped In Syria

    Charity Calls On Ottawa To Rescue 25 Canadian Kids Trapped In Syria
    TORONTO - An international charity is calling on Ottawa to rescue at least 25 Canadian children caught up in Turkey's offensive into northeastern Syria.    

    Charity Calls On Ottawa To Rescue 25 Canadian Kids Trapped In Syria

    Tories To Release Platform On Friday, Jagmeet Singh Sets Terms For NDP Minority Support

    The Conservatives are to release their campaign platform on Friday, coinciding with the opening of advance voting, a party spokesman said Thursday.    

    Tories To Release Platform On Friday, Jagmeet Singh Sets Terms For NDP Minority Support

    Girl Recalls Stabbing That Injured Her And Killed Her Friend At Abbotsford Senior Secondary School

    Girl Recalls Stabbing That Injured Her And Killed Her Friend At Abbotsford Senior Secondary School
    The girl, who was in Grade 9 at the time and cannot be named because of a publication ban, spoke in a video statement played in B.C. Supreme Court about the attack that killed 13-year-old Letisha Reimer.

    Girl Recalls Stabbing That Injured Her And Killed Her Friend At Abbotsford Senior Secondary School

    Climate Change Threatens Crops, Water For Billions Around Globe: Study

    Climate Change Threatens Crops, Water For Billions Around Globe: Study
    Canadian research is part of an extensive global climate change study that has found billions of the world's poorest people are at risk.

    Climate Change Threatens Crops, Water For Billions Around Globe: Study