Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Pace of job gains slows to 62,000 in November

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Dec, 2020 06:49 PM
  • Pace of job gains slows to 62,000 in November

The rate of job growth continued to slow in November with the economy adding 62,000 jobs, down from 84,000 in October.

The gains were mostly focused in full-time work with a gain of 99,000 jobs, offset somewhat by a decline in part-time work of 37,000 positions, Statistics Canada reported Friday.

The average economist estimate had been for a gain of 20,000 jobs and an unchanged unemployment rate, according to financial data firm Refinitiv.

The gains in November left the country 574,000 jobs short of recouping the approximately three million jobs lost from lockdowns in March and April that sent the unemployment rate skyrocketing to 13.7 per cent in May.

The unemployment rate fell to 8.5 per cent compared with 8.9 per cent in October.

The unemployment rate would have been 10.9 per cent in November, StatCan said, had it included in calculations Canadians who wanted to work last month but didn't search for a job.

The agency said 1.5 million people searched for jobs in November, a small drop of 39,000 from October, but still more than 448,000 or so who were looking for work in February, pre-pandemic.

The report noted that job searchers made up an increasing share of the total number of unemployed.

The youth unemployment rate fell 1.4 per cent to 17.4 per cent with a gain of about 20,000 jobs for the age group, mostly concentrated among young men with little change to the employment situation for women age 15 to 24.

Similarly, employment among women 25 to 54 years old didn’t change much in November after six straight months of seeing their numbers rise.

Positions in the hard-hit accommodation and food services sector declined for the second consecutive month, shedding 24,000 jobs in November.

That figure doesn’t take into account renewed restrictions in areas like Toronto that kicked in later in the month.

"As a result, it's likely that COVID will catch up with the Canadian economy in the December data, with a decline expected in both employment and overall economic activity," notes CIBC senior economist Royce Mendes.

Overall, the pace of job gains has slowed, with employment rising by 0.3 per cent in November compared to an average of 2.7 per cent per month between May and September.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Keystone XL 'not the same' as 2015 project: envoy

Keystone XL 'not the same' as 2015 project: envoy
President-elect Joe Biden has named Kerry, formerly Barack Obama's secretary of state, as a high-powered special adviser on climate change.

Keystone XL 'not the same' as 2015 project: envoy

Appeal Court rules against triple murderer

Appeal Court rules against triple murderer
Derek Saretzky's lawyer argued his client's first-degree murder conviction in the death of Hanne Meketech in 2015 should be overturned because Saretzky's rights were breached when police improperly took his confession.

Appeal Court rules against triple murderer

Abbotsford man arrested, for second time, after police called to gun incident

Abbotsford man arrested, for second time, after police called to gun incident
Officers respond to all firearm calls as though they are real until they can be otherwise determined to be replicas.

Abbotsford man arrested, for second time, after police called to gun incident

Other nations could get vaccines before Canada: PM

Other nations could get vaccines before Canada: PM
The prime minister nonetheless played down any potential threat to Canadian access to vaccines, noting the federal government has signed orders for millions of doses from a variety of foreign pharmaceutical companies in recent months.

Other nations could get vaccines before Canada: PM

B.C. officials clarify COVID-19 restrictions

B.C. officials clarify COVID-19 restrictions
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix spent part of their news conference today explaining what counts as an event or social gathering.

B.C. officials clarify COVID-19 restrictions

Cannabis edibles found in Halloween bag results in illegal lab shutdown

Cannabis edibles found in Halloween bag results in illegal lab shutdown
Fortunately the parent spotted the candy and warned other parents in the area, and Delta Police received no other complaints or information about children consuming cannabis.

Cannabis edibles found in Halloween bag results in illegal lab shutdown