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View Full Version : Eurozone unemployment rate hits record high



Le Socialiste
3rd April 2013, 21:41
Unemployment rose to a record high of 12 percent in February in the Eurozone, according to the latest data released by the EU's official statistics agency.

The Belgium-based Eurostat said on Tuesday that some 19.07 million people in the 17-member currency bloc are looking for jobs, up by 1.01 percent from the same month last year.

"Such unacceptably high levels of unemployment are a tragedy for Europe,"said a spokeswoman for EU Employment Commissioner Laszlo Andor. "The EU has to mobilise all available resources to create jobs...young people in particular need help," she said.

The figures and a weak manufacturing sector report added to the gloom after data earlier this year had encouraged some hope the European economy might finally have touched bottom.

Analysts suggested Tuesday's reports pointed instead to worse to come, with the jobless queues likely to grow as the debt crisis continues to sap the economy.

Youth unemployment

The highest unemployment rates in February were found in Spain with 26.3 percent and neighbour Portugal, on 17.5 percent.

Greece was put at it 26.4 percent but this figure is for December, the latest available.

The lowest rates were 4.8 percent in Austria and 5.4 percent in Germany, Europe's biggest economy.

With youth unemployment a huge cause of concern, Eurostat said that the jobless rate for under-25s ran at 23.9 percent in the Eurozone and 23.5 percent in the EU.

Among the countries with the highest youth jobless levels, Spain was on 55.7 percent, followed by Portugal on 38.2 percent and Italy with 37.8 percent.

Greece was the highest with 58.4 percent but this was also for December.

Howard Archer of IHS Global Insight said the figures marked a "dismal landmark" at 12 percent -- already very close to the official EU 2013 forecast of 12.2 percent.

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/europe/2013/04/20134211326617347.html

GiantMonkeyMan
3rd April 2013, 23:10
I think another huge issue is the so-called 'underemployment'. So many people are employed and yet still claiming welfare benefits because they don't get enough hours or they aren't earning enough. The vast majority of my friends who are university educated are stuck in minimum wage jobs with less than 20 hours a week and having to claim housing benefits regardless. My sister is not university educated but employed in social care for the elderly yet if she works more hours (as she's been offered) she would lose her child benefits to look after my nephew and actually be worse off. Myself, I've got a degree and am working minimum wage 18 hours a week. If I wasn't still living at home with my mum, I'd be on benefits as well. The unemployment figures, ridiculously high as they are, mask a hidden social problem.

TheRedAnarchist23
3rd April 2013, 23:25
In Portugal, if you want to find work, you must have at least a college degree. Your degree might get you a minimum wage job, because there is no way you are going to get anything superior to minimum wage. The ones who do not have degrees either cannot find jobs, or they work for below minimum wage. There are many stories of college graduates working for below minimum wage and having to live in their parents' house. Electricity, water, gas, all are too expensive for a single minimum wage worker, and only leave him a very small ammout to spend on food, nothing else.
Greece is only 2 years ahead of Portugal in the troika program. I expect things to become much worse.

Paul Pott
3rd April 2013, 23:39
I wonder what will happen when those economies like Greece, Portugal, Spain, etc. completely collapse.

TheRedAnarchist23
3rd April 2013, 23:46
I wonder what will happen when those economies like Greece, Portugal, Spain, etc. completely collapse.

The economy is doing just fine. The crisis is the excuse the troika gives us for taking away all our money and giving it to the capitalists.

Q
4th April 2013, 02:37
The economy is doing just fine. The crisis is the excuse the troika gives us for taking away all our money and giving it to the capitalists.

That is too simple. But it is certainly true that the troika is seizing the moment to implement its agenda of: a. European centralisation under neoliberal flag and b. "discipline" (such a nice word) the working class to these new circumstances.