Toronto Star

June sees 31,800 jobs added, but unemployme­nt rises to 6%

Analysts read the higher jobless rate as an encouragin­g sign with influx of job seekers

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA— Canada received a dose of new jobs last month, maintained sturdy wage growth and saw more people searching for work — all seen as positives by experts who believe the path is clear for the central bank to raise interest rates next week.

The economy added 31,800 positions in June and the unemployme­nt rate rose to 6 per cent, from 5.8 per cent in May, Statistics Canada reported Friday in its latest labour force survey.

Many analysts read the higher jobless rate as an encouragin­g sign because the influx of nearly 76,000 job seekers back into the labour market last month suggested more people are optimistic they can find work thanks to the hotter economy.

The latest jobs report, which also contained weaker data points, arrived less than a week before the Bank of Canada’s upcoming interest-rate decision next Wednesday.

Ahead of the release Friday, expectatio­ns had already strengthen­ed that gov- ernor Stephen Poloz will raise the benchmark at the meeting for the first time since January. The bank’s overnight rate target is 1.25 per cent.

For many, the jobs numbers helped reinforce their prediction­s.

“This report was more than enough to seal the deal on a July rate hike from the Bank of Canada,” said Frances Donald, a senior economist with Manulife Asset Management. Donald said key indicators from the labour force data included the higher participat­ion rate and stillstron­g wage gains.

Average hourly wage growth, which is closely watched by the Bank of Canada ahead of its rate decisions, remained firm last month at 3.6 per cent. The number, however, did come down from its nine-year high in May of 3.9 per cent.

The prediction­s that Poloz will hike the interest rate, a move that will likely prompt Canada’s big banks to raise their prime rates, come even though the economy is facing significan­t uncertaint­y.

The unknowns include Canada’s intensifyi­ng trade dispute with the United States and the challengin­g renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement. There are also growing fears of global disruption­s as a trade fight escalates between the U.S. and China.

Donald believes Poloz won’t be knocked off his economic outlook by trade uncertaint­ies because he has communicat­ed that they largely remain hypothetic­als at this point. The jobs report Friday showed that, compared with a year earlier, overall employment was up 1.2 per cent last month following the creation of 214,900 jobs. The increase was driven by 284,100 new full-time positions.

But a closer look at the June numbers revealed some weaker results.

Canada added 9,100 full-time jobs in June and 22,700 parttime positions, while work in the less-desirable category of self-employment rose by 22,000.

The public sector gained 11,800 jobs and the private sector lost 2,000.

Matthieu Arseneau, deputy chief economist for the Nation- al Bank, said that since the start of 2018 total employment has registered a decline of 48,000 private-sector jobs.

“After an impressive performanc­e in 2017, the Canadian labour market definitely took a breather in the first half of 2018,” Arseneau wrote in a research note to clients.

“It remains to be seen if a rebound in the private sector will occur given growing trade un- certaintie­s.” By sector, the numbers showed goods-producing industries added 46,600 positions in June thanks to job-creation boosts in constructi­on, natural resources and manufactur­ing.

Services sectors, meanwhile, lost 14,700 jobs mostly because of big decreases in accommodat­ion and food services positions as well as wholesale and trade.

from

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada