Qatar Tribune

Spain jobless figures down as crisis eases

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund estimates unemployme­nt in Spain could soar to 20.8 percent in 2020

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THE number of new jobseekers in Spain was close to 27,000 in May, around 10 times lower than in March and April during the coronaviru­s lockdown, the labour ministry said on Tuesday.

Spain imposed a nationwide lockdown on March 14 to slow the spread of the virus, and that month it counted more than 302,000 new jobseekers and another 280,000 in April.

But in May, as the lockdown was gradually eased, the government counted a total of 26,573 new jobseekers in the eurozone’s fourth-largest economy, where the total number of unemployed stands at 3.8 million.

At the end of March, the National Statistics Institute (INE), which calculates figures in a different way, gave Spain’s jobless figure as 3.31 million

These figures do not count those who have been furloughed.

Between mid-March and the end of May, a total of 3.7 million people were furloughed under a plan rolled out by the labour ministry.

The leftwing government of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez banned layoffs and simplified access to such temporary unemployme­nt programmes in a bid to ease the impact of the crisis in employment.

But when the furlough scheme draws to a close as planned at the end of June, unemployme­nt figures could rise again.

The government has urged there to be no job axed in the six months following the furlough period but layoffs are expected.

In May, as the lockdown was eased, the number of new jobseekers in the constructi­on sector fell by almost 7.0 percent compared with April.

In industry and agricultur­e, the figure remained stable but it grew by 1.5 percent in the service sector which has borne the brunt of the crisis, particular­ly due to the loss of significan­t numbers of temporary jobs in tourism.

In the first quarter, Spain’s unemployme­nt rate jumped to 14.4 percent, INE figures showed.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates unemployme­nt in Spain could soar to 20.8 percent in 2020, while the government expects a figure of 19 percent.

 ?? (AFP) ?? People queue to get a free food ration at a food bank in Madrid recently.
(AFP) People queue to get a free food ration at a food bank in Madrid recently.

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