Penticton Herald

Jobless rate drops back to 5.8%, but new work mostly part time

- By The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — The economy generated 54,100 net new jobs last month and saw its unemployme­nt rate fall — but the headline improvemen­ts overshadow­ed weaker details: a rush of new part-time, public-sector positions and a drop in full-time work.

The overall July increase in jobs pushed the unemployme­nt rate back to its fourdecade low of 5.8 per cent, down from six per cent the previous month, Statistics Canada’s latest labour force survey said Friday.

But a closer look at the numbers revealed that the country gained 82,000 less desirable, part-time positions last month — and it lost 28,000 full-time jobs. The public sector made the biggest contributi­on to the July increase with 49,600 new jobs, while the private sector added 5,200 positions.

Average hourly wage growth, which is scrutinize­d by the Bank of Canada, continued its gradual cool-off last month with a year-over-year reading of 3.2 per cent. In June, it expanded 3.6 per cent and in May the figure was 3.9 per cent, which marked a nineyear high.

The total number of hours worked in July expanded 1.3 per cent, a slightly slower pace than the June reading of 1.4 per cent.

In Kelowna, the unemployme­nt rate actually edged up — to 5.7 per cent in July from 5.6 per cent the month before.

“In the wacky world of Canada’s monthly employment numbers, July came up with another head scratcher, with some big headlines but some disappoint­ments in the fine print,” CIBC chief economist Avery Shenfeld wrote Friday in a research note to clients.

Shenfeld added that there are “lots of reasons to question just how good the data really are here.”

But overall he said the report contained a “good” set of numbers that will keep markets guessing whether the Bank of Canada will introduce its next interest rate hike in September or October. CIBC predicts the next rate increase will land in October.

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