Thursday, September 19, 2024

Greater Sudbury adds 1,900 jobs in August, StatsCan says

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Nationally, however, the economy can’t produce enough jobs to keep pace with growth in the number of working-age people

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Even though its unemployment rate ticked up 0.1 per in August, Greater Sudbury enjoyed strong job growth for the month, Statistics Canada says.

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The federal agency said the region added 2,000 full-time jobs last month, while losing 100 part-time positions. That means Greater Sudbury added 1,900 total jobs in August, StatsCan numbers show.

The unemployment rate in Greater Sudbury was 6 per cent as of August 2024, up 5.9 per cent from the previous month. That indicates that slightly more people were entering the job market than new jobs were being added.

The unemployment rate for August 2024 stood 4.7 per cent below the peak from December 2009 and is below the long-run average.

Full-time employment was still down 5,300 jobs from the peak in May 2019 but stood 5,200 jobs above the low in June 2020.

Nationally, Canada’s unemployment rate rose 0.2 percentage points to 6.6 per cent in August as the economy was unable to generate enough jobs to keep up with the increase in the population, according to Statistics Canada data.

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Analysts had expected the jobless rate to rise to 6.5 per cent from 6.4 per cent in July.

“This is a sure-fire recession indicator,” David Rosenberg, founder and president of Rosenberg Research & Associates Inc., said in a note.
Rosenberg called the August data “unimpressive and uninspiring,” noting the unemployment rate has risen 1.8 percentage points from its cycle low of 4.8 per cent in July 2022.

“Slack is building up fast in the Canadian economy, and there is nothing in the labour market to suggest the (Bank of Canada) can take its foot off the gas by even an inch in terms of the easing cycle,” he said.

Economist Michael Davenport at Oxford Economics Group Ltd. expects the unemployment rate will rise “well above” seven per cent by the end of 2024 as the economy fails to produce enough jobs to keep pace with growth in the number of working-age people.

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“Although the economy added a small number of jobs in August, the underlying trend in the labour market is clearly one of rising unemployment and weaker hiring,” he said in a note.

“Weak” details in the latest data included a drop in hours worked — down 0.1 per cent — and a decrease in full-time employment, while “the unemployment rate for youth continued to trend concerningly higher, and the employment rate fell for the 10th time in the past 11 months.”

Davenport expects the Bank of Canada to continue cutting by increments of 25 basis points at its upcoming meetings, including the remaining two this year.

“The data in (the) August labour survey paint a consistent picture of a cooling job market,” Tu Nguyen, an economist at tax consultancy RSM Canada LLP, said in a note, pointing to a lack of hiring and employment increases in sectors such as health care, education and social services that are “less sensitive to the macroeconomic environment.”

Nguyen also highlighted the five per cent increase in wage growth, an area of concern that the Bank of Canada mentioned on Wednesday when it cut interest rates by 25 basis points to 4.25 per cent.

Wage growth in August slowed from July, when it increased 5.2 per cent year over year, and the 5.4 per cent recorded in June.

Nguyen expects wage growth will likely continue falling as population growth outpaces the number of available positions.

“This job market report suggests more rate cuts will come,” she said.

– with files from the Financial Post

sud.editorial@sunmedia.ca

X: @SudburyStar

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