Toronto Star

Canada lost 63K jobs in December

StatsCan says decline is the first since April and pandemic’s first wave,

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OTTAWA— Canada posted its first monthly decline in jobs since April amid tightened public health restrictio­ns in December, and economists warn the losses are likely to continue in January as the number of new COVID- 19 cases continue to rise.

Statistics Canada said Friday the economy lost 63,000 jobs in December while the unemployme­nt rate edged up to 8.6 per cent compared with 8.5 per cent in November.

“Due to both the continuing rise in virus cases to open the new year and the further curtailmen­ts of activity since the last survey, another month of job losses could be on the horizon in January,” CIBC senior economist Royce Mendes said.

“The weak jobs report, combined with the recent appreciati­on of the Canadian dollar, will put pressure on the Bank of Canada to ease monetary policy further.”

Statistics Canada said its report was a snapshot of labour market conditions for the week of Dec. 6 to 12. It noted that additional public health measures were put in place in many provinces after that period and would likely to be reflected in its January labour force survey results.

Several provinces have also further extended COVID- 19 restrictio­ns as public health officials blamed holiday gatherings for a rise in infections.

TD Bank senior economist Sri Thanabalas­ingam said the resurgence of the virus is hitting Canada hard.

“Sharp increases in caseloads and hospitaliz­ations are leaving provinces with little choice but to impose or prolong restrictio­ns on an economy that is but a shadow of itself,” Thanabalas­ingam wrote in a report.

Mendes noted that when the restrictio­ns began to ease last spring and summer, the rebound in the economy came quickly.

“The good news is that last summer we saw a pretty sharp snapback at a time when virus cases were low and public health restrictio­ns were eased, so that should give people some optimism that after this rough patch is hopefully behind us, the economy can bounce back quite well in the short- term,” he said.

The job losses in December ended a streak of monthly job gains that began in May, when initial restrictio­ns put in place to slow the spread of the pandemic began to ease.

Full- time employment in December rose by 36,500, but there was a loss of 99,000 parttime jobs.

Statistics Canada said that total hours worked fell for the first time since April as they declined 0.3 per cent in December.

December employment fell in industries most directly affected by the new and continuing public health measures.

The number of jobs in the servicespr­oducing side of the economy fell for the first time since April as it lost a total of 74,000 in December. The goods- producing sector gained 11,300 jobs.

The accommodat­ion and food services industry lost 56,700 jobs for the month, while the “other services” category, which includes hair salons, laundry services and other areas affected by public health measures, lost 30,800. The informatio­n, culture and recreation group lost 18,800.

However, the manufactur­ing sector gained 15,000 jobs in December, driven by an increase in Ontario.

The share of Canadians working from home was 28.6 per cent in December.

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