On the heels of a surge in employment in November, Canadian
employment posted a strong increase again in December, growing by 40,000 jobs.
December's increase in jobs was entirely due to gains in full-time employment.
The Canadian economy added just shy of 100,000 new jobs in the final two months
of 2012, which pushed the national unemployment rate to 7.1 per cent, its
lowest level in 4 years.
Job growth in the BC economy was essentially flat as an
increase of 4,300 in full-time employment was mostly offset by declining
part-time employment. The BC unemployment rate fell 0.3 points to finish the
year at 6.5 per cent. Despite some
softness towards the end of the year, the story of the BC labour market in 2012
was overwhelmingly positive. BC
employment grew 1.7 per cent in 2012, a marked improvement from just 0.8 per
cent in 2011, while annual growth in full-time employment was 2.8 per cent in
2012 compared with just 0.5 per cent in 2011. The provincial unemployment rate
averaged 6.8 per cent in 2012, the first time in 4 years that unemployment fell
below 7 per cent.
Finally, the US economy continued its slow and steady
recovery, adding 155,000 jobs in December following job growth of 161,000 in
November. The US unemployment rate remained constant, finishing the year at 7.8
per cent.
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