CANADA
News
Kristin Hoper
Toronto
November 18, 2024
Last month, Canada's unemployment rate fell for the first
time since January by 0.1 percentage points to 6.5 per cent, according to Statistics Canada in its
Labour Force Survey(opens in a new tab) for September released Friday. The figure had risen 0.2
percentage points in August.
In addition, StatCan said the economy added 47,000 jobs in September, up slightly by 0.2 per cent,
after four straight months of little change. Employment rose among youth aged 15 to 24 and women aged
25 to 54. Job increases were seen in Ontario, Manitoba, Quebec and Nova Scotia, while declines were
experienced in British Columbia and New Brunswick.
While Pedro Antunes, chief economist at the Conference Board of Canada, called the job growth
numbers "good news," he said the decrease in the employment rate is a concern. The employment
rate(opens in a new tab), the percentage of the population aged 15 and older who are employed, fell
0.1 percentage point to 60.7 per cent, according to StatCan. This is down from a peak of 62.4 per cent
in January and February 2023.
Although job growth has been "pretty good," Antunes said, the number of
people entering the workforce has grown even more.
"This is because we have opened up a lot of
immigration, a lot of temporary foreign workers. So, we've seen essentially the employment rate
decline and the job market slackening," Antunes said in an interview with CTV News Channel on
Friday.
The unemployment rate's decline last month still suggests a "fairly slack labour market,"
he added.
"Now the government is intending to put the breaks on temporary foreign workers and
essentially non-permanent resident immigration," he said. "I think that is going to continue to
tighten up the labour market as we go forward even in a soft job-generating environment."
Recently
announced changes to the temporary foreign worker program(opens in a new tab) went into effect last
month.
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