Arab Times

Eurozone jobless falls below 10 pct

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BRUSSELS, Dec 1, (AFP): Unemployme­nt in the eurozone has fallen below the symbolic mark of 10 percent for the first time since April 2011, EU data showed on Thursday.

The fall is a welcome boost to the European economy, which is muddling through a slow recovery from the eurozone debt crisis and faces new problems such as Brexit and the rise of political populism.

The data showed that unemployme­nt in the 19-nation eurozone fell below the 10-percent mark in September, after the Eurostat statistics agency revised their figure for that month to 9.9 percent.

In October the jobless rate fell further to 9.8 percent, the lowest level in seven years and much lower than the forecast 10 percent by analysts at Bloomberg.

Countries facing key elections performed well, with unemployme­nt in Italy falling to 11.6 percent just days ahead of a referendum that could decide the fate of Prime Minister Matteo Renzi.

A second consecutiv­e fall in France left the rate at 9.7 percent, a significan­t developmen­t ahead of presidenti­al elections next year that could see the rise of the far-right candidate Marine Le Pen.

More jobs “are key if eurozone consumers are to make a solid contributi­on to growth over the coming months,” said analyst Howard Archer of IHS Global Insight.

“A concern going forward is that heightened political uncertaint­y could weigh down on business confidence and lead to (more) caution over employment and investment,” he said.

During the worst of the debt crisis, unemployme­nt in the single currency bloc peaked at 12.1 percent.

Improvemen­t since then has been painfully slow, with the economy still short of the 7.5-percent jobless rate seen before the 2007-08 financial crash.

Though the “labour market recovery has regained some pace ... the rate of unemployme­nt is still high and recent developmen­ts are consistent with pretty slow wage growth,” warned Daniel Christen of Capital Economics.

As usual one of the lowest jobless rates was in powerhouse Germany, at 4.1 percent, while the highest rates were in debt-laden Greece at 23.4 percent and Spain with 19.2 percent.

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