Scottish Daily Mail

Jobless rate in eurozone twice as high as in UK

- by Hugo Duncan

Unemployme­nt in the crisis-torn eurozone has fallen to its lowest level since the financial crisis – but is still more than twice as high as in Brexit Britain.

In a report that laid bare the jobs crisis gripping the Continent, official statistics agency Eurostat said unemployme­nt in the single currency bloc was now 8.2pc.

That is the lowest level since november 2008, shortly after the collapse of lehman Brothers, when the global economy was in the depths of recession.

But it is still more than double the 4pc rate seen in the uK where years of steady economic growth have pushed the number of people in work to a record high.

unemployme­nt in Britain has not been this low since early 1975 when Harold Wilson was Prime Minister and Margaret Thatcher became leader of the Tory Party.

The jobless rate in France is 9.2pc while it is 10.4pc in Italy, 15.1pc in Spain and 19.5pc in Greece. and while youth unemployme­nt in Britain has fallen below 500,000 for the first time and stands at 11.3pc, it is over 30pc in Greece, Spain and Italy.

Brexit supporter John longworth, former director general of the British Chambers of Commerce, said: ‘It is astonishin­g that the Eu celebrate reducing their unemployme­nt rate to an eye-wateringly high 8.2pc. In some parts of the eurozone, youth unemployme­nt is a shameful 30pc or more. Who would want to be a member of that club when Britain continues to have the highest level of employment in history?’

In a devastatin­g analysis of the jobs crisis in the eurozone, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund this summer warned that sky-high youth unemployme­nt posed a major threat to prosperity in the region.

‘Prolonged unemployme­nt and inactivity can have longlastin­g effects on young people’s skills and incomes, adversely affecting human capital,’ the IMF said.

‘Poor job prospects for the young can make them increasing­ly dependent on their family wealth, therefore reducing social mobility.

‘all in all, lower human capital and growing inequality of opportunit­y will in the long term be detrimenta­l to the euro area’s growth potential.’

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