Showing posts with label Drops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drops. Show all posts

Saturday, 22 April 2017

Data Forecasts Spanish Unemployment Drops Below 17% for First Time in Years

Data Forecasts Spanish Unemployment Drops Below 17% for First Time in Years


Its official when the economy is moving in the right
direction unemployment drops drastically
Spain saw unemployment soar to the record rate of 27% in 2013, but is now looking at ending 2017 with less than 17% unemployment for the first time in years.

While there is still the myth that the Spanish economy is still stagnant, official figures from government and European bodies show that Spain has been one of the strongest economic performers in the continent for the past 18 months now.

While 17% unemployment could still be considered pretty high, in relative terms it means Spain is on course for another year of strong economic growth. The rate of unemployment fell to 18.6% in 2016, and it’s predicted that it could fall another 2% during 2017; which would mean over half a million more people in work.

This was the message spread by the Spanish Economic Minister Luis de Guindos last week. The Economic Minister admitted that the unemployment rate in the country was still inadequate, but was still very bullish overall on the long-term prospects.

Economic growth topped 3.2% GDP in 2016, with similar levels of growth expected for this year, and a further +2.5% growth expected for the next four years. The queues in the job centre are getting shorter, and thousands of educated Spanish youth are returning from Germany, the UK, and wherever else they have been, creating what economists feel is more of an opportunity than a burden.

Youth unemployment in Spain is still one of the highest in Europe, reaching over 25%, but there has been plenty of recovery in other industries; evident by the rising number of Spaniards being issued with mortgages. This has left the Spanish youth more confident about their chances of securing a bright future in their home country.



Tuesday, 6 September 2016

Spanish Unemployment Drops at Highest Rate in 20 Years




Spanish Unemployment Drops at Highest Rate in 20 Years

Even though two-thirds of the jobs that were created in June were temporary positions, more and more open-ended jobs are being created.

Spanish unemployment is slowly turning a corner
Spain always sees a boom in jobs during the summer and this boom was bigger than ever with data showing the country welcomed 84,000 new employees to social security in June; representing the biggest single fall in unemployment the country has seen since 1997.

The Employment Ministry confirmed that 83,993 people registered with the state employment offices at the beginning of July. The current official unemployment figures now stand at 3.68 million in Spain.

Going on a month-by-month basis July saw 84,721 more people added to the payroll than in June. When you compare it to figures from last year there are 3% more people working this July than last July. Spain currently has 17.8 million people contributing to social security.

Many of these new jobs (around 51,000) were created in the hotel and catering sectors. This is confirmation of the trend that the reason Spain’s economy does so well during summer is because of the long summer tourism season. While many of these jobs are often temporary current trends suggest that many of these “summer jobs” could last longer and some may even become permanent positions.

Spanish daily El País are reporting that 7.6% of the new contracts signed in July, which is about 1.81 million, were open-ended. This means that the positions the contracts are for could last longer than the summer season. This might sound like a small figure but it is representative of a growing confidence in the hospitality sector; a confidence reinforced by the record number of tourists, higher spending per head, and the recovering economies of both Spain and Europe as a whole.

Marcel Jensen, an economy professor with the Autónoma University of Madrid said that the figures show how strongly the Spanish economy is doing right now and the cost of living in Spain is being kept low. More people are being employed each quarter. Marcel did warn that reforms would be needed to maintain this success in the long term though.

Such reforms, which have been introduced in the past few years to liberalise the employment sector of Spain, appear to have done a good job of boosting employment. Even so analysts and financial experts believe that the growth Spain has seen for the past two years will slow down within the next two years.