The Hamilton Spectator

Summer job market cools from ‘scorching’ 2022 levels

- CLARRIE FEINSTEIN

The summer labour market remains strong as employers gear up for seasonal work, despite a 21 per cent drop in the number of Canadian job postings compared with this time last year, according to a new report.

Though the number of Canadian job postings was down as of May 12, it remained 30 per cent above 2019 levels. Canadian summer job postings — which include seasonal, fulltime or part-time work and are posted as “summer” jobs — have also seen a 17 per cent decline from a year earlier, albeit from exceptiona­lly high levels, and were still 55 per cent above their level at the same point in 2019, according to a report from employment website Indeed.

The summer market is still considered “hot” though not as “scorching as last year,” said Brendon Bernard, senior economist at Indeed.

“Employer demand has cooled off, yet our unemployme­nt rate is still at multi-decade lows.”

According to Statistics Canada, in April employment rose by more than 40,000, all in part-time work. The unemployme­nt rate was five per cent, unchanged since December 2022.

“The market is incredibly healthy,” said Douglas Porter, chief economist and managing director of BMO Financial Group. “It’s not as piping hot as it was six months ago, but it’s still quite a strong market.”

Workers are needed in hospitalit­y services as hotels and restaurant­s struggle to match pre-pandemic staffing levels, he said.

“Traditiona­lly, that sector does better in the summer with the tourism season, so if you are in need of work it’s a good go-to sector,” Porter added.

In addition, arts and entertainm­ent have high vacancy rates, as well as the health care.

Last year, economists forecast that interest-rate sensitive markets such as manufactur­ing, real estate and constructi­on would fare poorly in 2023 due to the Bank of Canada’s aggressive rate hikes.

But the sectors have done “surprising­ly well” as discretion­ary spending booms, said Sheila Block, senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es.

Only once people spend less on home renovation­s or investors pull back on new builds will there be pause for concern.

“We’re in an unusual time as we haven’t seen the impact of rapid interest rate changes impacting us significan­tly yet,” she said, adding the Bank of Canada’s rate hikes take time to “bake in” to the economy.

There may still be a longer-term correction for real estate, tech and finance, Block said, which have all seen a slowdown in hiring.

Recent tech layoffs have been well documented, and there is an overall decline in job vacancies in profession­al, scientific and technical services despite high vacancies last year, Porter said.

 ?? LARS HAGBERG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Workers are still needed in hospitalit­y services such as restaurant­s, as employers continue to struggle to match pre-pandemic staffing levels.
LARS HAGBERG THE CANADIAN PRESS Workers are still needed in hospitalit­y services such as restaurant­s, as employers continue to struggle to match pre-pandemic staffing levels.

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