Canada: Labour Market Remains Strong
August 10th, 2007 • Related • Filed Under
- Canadian employment was little changed in July, leaving growth so far in 2007 at 1.3%, similar to the growth rate in the first seven months of 2006. The unemployment rate edged down 0.1 percentage points to 6.0%, the lowest since 1974.
- Alberta showed a significant employment increase in July, as an estimated 14,000 more people were working. This pushed Alberta’s employment rate back to its record high of 71.6%. Gains in July were in full-time work, and mainly in health care and social assistance and trade.
- In Ontario, manufacturing employment was up an estimated 27,000 in July, the first significant increase in more than a year, with gains spread across several manufacturing industries. There were also gains in professional, scientific and technical services, while employment declined in educational services.
- Employment in Nova Scotia declined by an estimated 3,000 in July, continuing the weakness observed since May 2007.
New Jobs In Canada
Between June 2007 and July 2007
| Province |
New Jobs |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | -1,700 |
| Prince Edward Island | -300 |
| Nova Scotia | -3,400 |
| New Brunswick | -3,200 |
| Quebec | -400 |
| Ontario | 11,400 |
| Manitoba | -1,900 |
| Saskatchewan | -300 |
| Alberta | 13,600 |
| British Columbia | -2,500 |