CTV News | Unemployment rate jumps to 8.6 per cent in June

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Unemployment rate jumps to 8.6 per cent in June

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CTV News: Graham Richardson on the numbers
CTV Calgary: Sue French reports on the unemployment numbers in Alberta
CTV News Channel: BNN's Michael Hainsworth on the unemployment rate
CTV News Channel: Sylvain Schetagne, Canadian Labour Congress, on the job figures
Canada AM: Daniel Schwanen, economist, Centre for International Governance Innovation
Canada AM: BNN's Michael Kane with why the numbers aren't as bad as they appear

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CTV.ca News Staff

Date: Fri. Jul. 10 2009 2:00 PM ET

Canada's unemployment rate edged up 0.2 percentage points to 8.6 per cent in June but the economy only shed 7,400 jobs.

Economists had predicted that Canada would lose about 35,000 jobs in June.

"While employment remains well below its October 2008 peak, there was a notable shift in the pace of the downward trend in employment in the last three months," the Statistics Canada report said.

"Total net losses were 13,000 for the last three months, much less than the 273,000 decline in the first three months of this year."

Although the overall job losses were less than expected, economist Daniel Schwanen said it's still only a tentative sign that things are stabilizing in the Canadian labour market.

"It's not a great sign on the more traditional full-time job creation front," he told CTV's Canada AM on Friday.

According to the Statistics Canada report, full-time employment continued its downward trend in June, offsetting gains in part-time work.

In total, 47,500 full-time jobs disappeared in June, raising the total losses in the category to 454,000.

The full-time job category is seen as the most reliable indicator of labour market strength.

Meanwhile, self-employment rose in June by 1.5 per cent. Comparatively, the number of employees has declined by 3.3 per cent in the private sector and 1.4 per cent in the public sector.

Schwanen said the spending stimulus hasn't had much of an impact yet because the projects are still rolling out.

"The real impact is going to be in the months ahead simply because of the time lag necessary to put the projects in place," he said.

The report said the summer job market was also in a slump as there were 43,000 fewer students aged 20 to 24 working in June than during the same month last year.

"This pushed their unemployment rate up 4.8 percentage points to 14.0 per cent, the highest June unemployment rate for these students since 1997," the report said.

Provincially, Newfoundland and Labrador was the only province with employment gains, up 2,500, in June. Still, the province's unemployment rate edged up to 15.6 per cent since more people were looking for work.

In Ontario, full-time losses (-56,000) were offset by part-time gains (+57,000), leaving total employment unchanged. The unemployment rate edged up to 9.6 per cent in the province last month.

Saskatchewan was the only province with an upward trend in employment since October (+1.0 per cent). At 4.6 per cent in June, the unemployment rate in Saskatchewan was the lowest of all provinces.

Earlier this month, the U.S. reported its jobless rate hit a 26-year high after the economy shed 467,000 jobs in June. And despite Washington's billions in stimulus spending, unemployment now sits at a dismal 9.5 per cent.

In a research note Friday, BMO Nesbitt Burns said Canada's job report compares favourably to the situation south of the border.

"Still, even if the job losses are gradually easing, it's obvious that recession has yet to let go its steely grip on the Canadian economy, with the squeeze remaining particularly intense in manufacturing."

Comments are now closed for this story

Larry I Ontario
said
0 0

We must see large changes in our government.the finance Minister must go as he is doing nothing to help the job numbers and we need to vote Harper out of power as he has mismanaged the entire crisis!


Dan R.
said
0 0

If people go to the stores and buy, this would boost consumer confidence and therefore perhaps soften the blow, but not eliminate the blow--at least not for sometime to come.


Toronto_FS
said
0 0

The details of the job report masked only a slight up tick in the unemployment rate..48K full time jobs were lost replaced by 40K part time jobs most of which were considered self employmed...


TM in Canada
said
0 0

It's tough times for sure when 7,000 job losses in a month passes for good news!
Unemployment rate is at 8.6%, How much has the social assistance cases risen?


Nancy: The slackers are looking for work
said
0 0

I still see lots of help wanted signs. People who could call in sick, show up late and leave early are no longer working. All the good employees are still working and if not find work quickly.


Wade Ens
said
0 0

Spoiled students are too fussy about what kind of work they will do and how much they will work for.
90% employment is still pretty good in the great depression is was 50% with many stay at home moms.


Joseph Toronto: Blame the Liberals in Ontario
said
0 0

Ontario is the problem the Liberals running it keep pounding it into the ground. Their green policies wrecked the car business, there high taxation and stong unions sent all the work China. Almost all of the job losses are in Ontario.


James
said
0 0

Yet still EI benefits do not reach all and the benefits are not nearly enough. Shame!


Wes
said
0 0

I'm not surprise...and it's only gonna get worse.




Kevin in NS
said
0 0

It is also about reality. If you want to wait around for that $30.00 hr job then you'll be waiting for a while. Around our town there are employment opportunities, but few are willing to start over. I have a few friends who are doing double jobs until they get a break at one good paying job. I also know a few who sit around and grumble about their decline. Reality folks; it is what it is - most just do not know how to handle hardship.


terri
said
0 0

I am still seeing help wanted signs as well. I know people that are refusing to work because it is not enough money.I have been told if it is not over 12 bucks an hour, I will not work. Of course they are going to have to work someday .Ei doesn't last forever does it?42 weeks is pretty good though


Concerned Canadian
said
0 0

Thanks to Nancy, we now know that it's only the "slackers" who have been laid off due to what is supposedly a "recession".

In fact, this is only a code word; employers are deliberately running their businesses into the ground in order to get rid of the "slackers. So this is a world-wide slacker lay off.

Which happened coincidentally.

Worldwide.

It has nothing to do with any mythical "financial meltdown" caused by a "credit crisis" due to deregulation of the financial markets by Republican Congressmen and women.

Nope.

This is a recesion caused by slackers.

And oh yeah, unions.

Nothing to do with politicians and businesspeople dropping the ball.

If only those "slackers" would get back to work...


Paul - Orillia
said
0 0

I wonder who was watching who's work when these statistics were published.

The last time this CON government released figures of self employment, it skewed the facts. Again they are doing this to make you think things are rosier.

Are these self employed really making any income?

Just another figure to make people think things are dramatically better, when they are probably not


Bren
said
0 0

WOW are you peoploe ever victims of misinformation and media hype. 8.6% is the "high" end of the normal range. Where were you when it was as high or higher under Chretien WITHOUT a world wide reccession? Or under Trudeau when it was higher still? I wonder how many people that are whining about the unemployment numbers use ATMs and self check outs at the store rather then going through where there is a cashier. Mr Harper has been applauded by every economic gropup in the world practically ( except Canadas of course.) It would seem that again..he was right and the naysayers were wrong since the new figures are WAY better then the naysayers and gloomy guses went on about. Prsonally, I have not seen any great misfortune befall anyone financially...all of my friends and aquaintances still own houses and cars and cottages, still go out for dinner, ride motorcycles and go on holidays.


Bren
said
0 0

EI should be like every other insurance. The more you claim it..the higher your rates. Its 20%^ of the people making 80% of the claims. I have never been out of work in my life. I see help wanted signs all over the place.I know some of them arent payiung that well.,..but the only change we need is to demand that people a) work more and b) that the claim system support those who are working for nickels and dimes rather then pay those who sit on their duff.


Jayme
said
0 0

I find its not there are not jobs there are plenty of them in some cases an all time high.The probleam is some people refuse to work for anything below $12.


Buba
said
0 0

The numbers are skewed because it's 47,000 REAL jobs replaced by 40,000 MCJOBS.


Roger T
said
0 0

And how is the economy in better shape when unemployment is rising. Harper and his team has put the country in despair and while giving hopeless speaches to make his team look good just for a show on NOTHING!

With the unemployment rising and still rising, soon citizens across the country will start to feeling agitated and problems will start.


Samual
said
0 0

Good thinking Dan!
All the unemployed should go spend their savings.
These numbers are based on people who are on EI.
It doesn't include the people not eligble for EI, people who's EI ran out or self empolyed that are no working.
The real numbers are at least twice as much.
Yesterday showed houeing starts up, But they are down more than 30% from years past. Bankruptcies are soaring. The stock market is on it's way back down.
There are 20 million homes in the US that are worth less than the mortgages.
I for one am not spending a dime.
This is the beginning of the great depression.



Prof. Pye Chartt
said
0 0

THE GORILLA IS STILL IN THE ROOM

"...the economy only shed 7,400 jobs. Economists had predicted that Canada would lose about 35,000 jobs in June."

------------

"...the spending stimulus hasn't had much of an impact yet because the projects are still rolling out."
_____________________

Yet another day with evidence that the "stimulus packages" willingly and desperately crammed down our throats by the political potatoheads running our "global" economy are completely and utterly deserving of both skepticism and criticism.

We better see one hell of a quantifiable bounce in our collective economic health soon after all that money finally hits ground zero; otherwise, at that point, we'll all have to line up in a public place to have "INDEBTED TAXPAYING SUCKER" stamped on our forehead.

Thumbs up to the elected braintrust.


André in Ontario
said
0 0

I said it before & I'll say it again, economist aren't as smart as they try to lead people to believe. They're about as accurate as a 7 day forecast by a weatherman. And I would say the weatherman has a better average.


André in Ontario
said
0 0

Nancy said all the slackers are looking for work.
What an idiotic statement to make.You must be a Con supporter that has no clue of what she's talking about. Go back to bed & pull the covers over your head & live in you little dream world. And if all the slackers are looking for work how can that be? The whole Harpo cabinet have jobs & talk about slacking off at a job that they're supposed to be doing.


ghippe
said
0 0

I fail to see how losing full time jobs with benefits and generally much higher rates of pay to part time jobs at minimum wage is 'unchanged' jobless rate? Try feeding the kids and making a mortgage payment on 20 hrs at 10 bucks an hour. Self employed rising - well considering many cemployers are now 'contracting' the work with their employees that is a bad sign not a good one


Ronald in Toronto
said
0 0

There's life in the ol' body yet and the bleeding is slowing.

I'm taking that as Good News.


jt
said
0 0

Samual
I am not sure if the real number are twice as much.IN fact the real numbers may be less.


Daniel
said
0 0

With regard to Larry I Ontario, do you actually live in Ontario? We are hurting big time here and the Dalton Liberals have done NOTHING to help us out. Thats why we have a crumbling manufacturing sector and a skyrocketing unemployment rate.

And if a student pays $60,000 to get an education and doesn't want a pathetic job that requires no skills, than that is there choice.

Paul Orillia - the data came from Statistics Canada not the COn government. No where have I heard that they were touting our rising employment and since StatsCanada released the details, I do not see how they have any involvement in todays report.


Steve in Manotick
said
0 0

Let me see here.... The pm has said most of the stimulus money is "out the door and rolling" If this is the case there should be an increase in those employed which is not the case. I have to wonder just how truthful the numbers the finance minister and the pm have told us.

Oh by the way what happened to open and tranparent government in our Great Country? hmmm I guess the pm forgot about it as he was too busy being late for his photo op one more time...


Ann
said
0 0

To Nancy,

All the good workers are not finding work quickly. My husband was laid off from a seasonal job in construction and as a result of the company losing a major contract he was not recalled to work. He has been and continues to look for work each day with no luck. He has sent out over 500 applications with only 4 interviews. And now EI has run out.

I don't know where you live but there are not a lot of help wanted signs in Barrie/Orillia. Commuting to Toronto is not worth it for minimum wage. Living in Toronto would put us in far worse of situation than we are already in.

My husband has skills as a welder and a truck driver but cannot get a job because he does not have enough experience yet. He just received that response when he tried out for a trucking position this past Monday July 6.

So your comment that the good workers are finding employment is not accurate. Before you make statements like that check your facts. My husband would love to work instead of being a stay at home dad. You have no idea what it does to a person's self confidence to send out application after application and still not get a job.


Again a good news story
said
0 0

WoW Larry what world are you living in? This is a good news story. The experts predicted job losses to be 500% larger than what they were. We are better off than almost ever other developed economy. It amazes me how you can just ignore the facts. But it is about time people like you start living in the real world. Things are bad out there, but Canada continues to do ver very well in comparison. This is due in part to the people of this country and our government. Both Liberal and Tory. So stop with the lies, the Tories are doing a half decent job on the economy.


JMJ
said
0 0

How many of those 'self-employed' are actually public sector retirees collecting their pensions and back at their former job as consultants? And how many of the real self-employed will be around next year? This entire category is really a dogs breakfast of workers and does not give a good measure of people actually working and earning a paycheque.


island girl
said
0 0

Some people may be able to survive on $12 an hour if there are other wage earners in the family. I've actually had jobs I've had to quit because my overhead (transportation, insurance, food, shelter, utilities, etc) cost more than what I was earning. I've never had debt so that never factored in. I've never believed in money being everything, but if you lose money while working, there's something wrong.


Interesting Fact Alberta
said
0 0

I love these reports, its a good news story. What i find really interesting is how the comments and voting evovle during the day. In the day the posts are all left leaning and the votes are all in support. But as people get home from work, the posts turn noticably right and the voting does too. I guess the liberal supports are either unemployed, or have time during their jobs to post. The Con supporter seem to only post once they get home from work. For myself I have a vacation day today.


MD
said
0 0

When will this government realise Canada is not in the position to be taking in 265,000 immigrants for 2009. We shouldn't even be bringing in that amount even if there wasn't a recession.

Canada has the highest per capita immigration rate in the world. We can no longer be doing this. Most of our immigrants are coming from the 3rd world where wages average 20-50 cents an hour. The undercut of wages occurs in Canada on a yearly basis because of this. Average wages have decreased by 20% from 1980-2005 in inflation adjusted dollars says StatsCan. In the same time frame top earners in Canada saw their wages increase 16.4%. Canada must stop relying on the 3rd world for cheap labour if we don‘t want our living standards to continue deteriorating. I've worked in the job placement industry in Toronto, I know this first hand.

Time for immigration reform! Canadian citizens come first, not the international bankers!


SpinMeNot
said
0 0

This is a world wide recession. Look at the unemployment in other industrial countries and then thank the Harper government for minimizing the pain in Canada.


Ron
said
0 0

Liberals have such short memories. The decry and wring their crying towels over 8.6 percent. Well, I am old enough to remember when, not too long ago, double digit unemployment was common and 8.6 percent was considered good. A time when people understood that recessions happen. Like all Liberal lies they exaggerate for effect then start believing in their own lies. We are in a global recession but they somehow expect Canada to be immune! The refuse to acknowledge Canada is navigating this recession better than any other country in the world; we went into it nearly a year after the Americans and will come out of it a lot earlier. Recessions are NORMAL but somehow people are mislead into believing this is a new and never-seen event - hogwash! Manufacturing took a major hit because Canadian manufacturing (especially the auto sector) was, by and large, poorly run. They depended too heavily on the 60 cent dollar, payed exorbitant union rates for production and failed to develop business models that took into effect the basic fact we live in a world economy. We can only build and subsidize horseshoe industries so long before they must convert to the modern reality or die. The world keeps changing and manufacturing must keep up. None of this is new - its probably just our politically correct education systems and over dependence on government handouts has led a large group to believe we are entitled to be exempt from the realities of the world economic plight.


jay
said
0 0

Daniel
Thats the probleam i have is people don't want to work at some jobs.As they perfer to stay home and collect ei this is a big probleam.


Canada Goose Whistler
said
0 0

The cons always make me laugh!!!
You want people to work for less than 12.00 per hour.
Harper set a new rate for minimum wage with the auto welfare.
If unskilled auto worker jobs were worth 75 to 80 per hour.
They knocked it down 22 per hour. Then that's 53 to 68 per hour for unskilled labor.
So tell me why others not receiving welfare should work for under 12.
I can only afford to pay 30 to unskilled labor which is still less than Harper approved for unskilled auto workers.
Harper does not think, I'm beginning to think there is not a cons alive with a brain.


Tim from Calgary
said
0 0

Anyone blaming the Conservative government directly is showing their complete and total ignorance of the situation. Until our biggest customer by far (the US economy) recovers, the Canadian economy will slow. It's the basic law of supply and demand. Demand is down for Canadian products in the US so supply must go down as well. Harper was right when he said that "Canada is not an island" when it comes to weathering the global recession. Anyone who thinks that the Canadian government can magically fix the problem does not understand basic economics. And the NDP and Liberals idea of spend, spend, spend is complete foolishness. Just wait until high inflation kicks in after Obama's massive spending program.


Adam, Toronto
said
0 0

I have a cool idea. For the almost 10% unemployment we are about to be hit with, lets cut the politicians salaries by 10%. Its only fair?


Keith Fox
said
0 0

Come to the western provinces
of Manitoba and Saskatechewan
there is no recession in the
cities and rural areas of
these two provinces. There is
a real need for construction
workers as there are alot of
multi billion dollar projects
going on right now and more
to start in the near future.


Andrea
said
0 0

The 7400 job losses is nothing compared to what happened in the winter or early spring.

Maybe it is time to look at the sectors where the part time jobs are created, and try to make them fulltime, or people should start to work 2 part time jobs.

Or maybe go to college or university part time But then the govt would have to agree to give loans to people who want to go back to college on a part time basis.


Conservative times are hard times, as usual.
said
0 0

Get out of the way, Clownservatives.


MAL of TO
said
0 0

I suspect the influx of students has effected this stat. It will be more interesting to see the stats in July when all the seasonal employment is running at full [or as full as it gets this year] and the students have already been counted. If we are entering a partial recovery, July should show a drop in unemployment.


Red X
said
0 0

June 2008; Unemployment 6.2%, TSX 15,000plus
Today, Unemployment 8.6%, TSX 9700ish & falling

Harper is an Economist?! The Economy show Non Confidence!

Year over year, CANADA is doing worst. What will the Economists say when the Unemployment rate goes over 10%?...


Harper's done nothing
said
0 0

except coast on Paul Martin's deft financial management.


SA
said
0 0

how about those unfortunate bunch that just GRADUATED within the last year?
how will they get their entry level jobs?
who's hiring entry level ,who is doing GRAD hiring programs?


Rick in NB
said
0 0

Interesting Fact Alberta,
That's quite a senario you've put together. It might hold water if Canada didn't have 6 time zones. That sort of throws a rench in your spokes doesn't it.








































































Ian
said
0 0

no wonder i can't find a job out there. now if we could get some help from the goverment to do some thing about our credit card bills. they keep raising the dam rates and how am i suposed to pay them if i cant afford to even feed my self cause i have been out of work for 8 months and welfair is no help ether. try lving a month on less than 400$. some days you go with out eating.

where is the help. goverment.


KMC (Markham, ON)
said
0 0

'UNEMPLOYMENT RATE JUMPS TO 8.6%"

Or, put in a less Liberal partisan way,

"UNEMPLYMENT RATE RISE LESS THAN EXPECTED"

Clearly, if the jobless rate rose by a mere 7400, about ONE-FIFTH of the expected 35,000, that would be good news.

Wouldn't it?

Of course, this is all part of CTV's efforts to prepare the way, for the Liberals, with an eye to a Fall election.

Hence the negative spin.




Julie in Ontario
said
0 0

Currently I work selling ad space in student publication all across Canada. These ads are primarily recruitment oriented.

Since October 2008, there has been a steady decrease in the advertising, I'd say at about 50%. Certain programs are still able to see growth, where others are under half.

Hardest hit this year are opportunities for engineering students, primarily Alberta, Ontario, Quebec and BC.

Many students will have to bite the bullet and accept non-paying positions just to get experience, which many can't afford.



GP, Victoria
said
0 0

I heard from a peer in the US the other day that US Corporations are laying people off claiming it’s the recession, then posting the position to get better qualified people at a lower salary and benefits. Unchecked greed continues to be alive and well in the US.

I’m curious if that trend has surfaced here in Canada…I’m betting it will.


DJM
said
0 0

An increase of 0.2% is a jump?


Frank
said
0 0

Even here in Nova Scotia I see a good number of help wanted signs, but the common mentality is.."but it may be full time, I like working 10 weeks a year, then lay around for 42". Full employment in Canada is viewed as 7%, so right now that means that only 1.6% are seriously looking for employment. Not bad!


Interesting Fact - Alberta
said
0 0

Rick in NB by 7pm Eastern time this posting page will look significantly different. Correcting for time, Alberta-West where all the tory support is will still be at work. The population in Atlantic Canada is statistically insignificant and the vast majority of Franco Quebecers read RDS not CTV, and when I posted at 9am eastern most of the rest of the time zones were still in bed. So I would say your time zone arguement although logical, does not impact my point. It was aimed at Ontario where the vast majority of the economic problems of this country reside.


Commerce Guy
said
0 0

A few people have commented that businesses should look at making some part-time positions full time, and I also like GP, Victoria's comment about companies ditching older workers and then hiring on newer ones for less.

Businesses are not your friend, they do not exist to pay you so you can have a wonderful and prosperous little life, they exist to make money, everyone should know that by now, and although happy workers are good for businesses, having more part-time workers on staff and canning some old overpaid employees is a smart cost cutting move in certain situations.



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