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Canada Reached Some Labour Market Milestones in August

Alex Carrick
Canada Reached Some Labour Market Milestones in August

According to , the Canadian total jobs count climbed by +90,000 in August to sit at just under 19 million. The year-over-year gain in employment has been only slightly under a million jobs (+958,000). Ontario (+419,000 jobs) and British Columbia (+201,000 jobs) have been the two provinces with the best records in nominal jobs creation over the past 12 months.

Canada Reached Some Labour Market Milestones in August Text Graphic

The Canadian seasonally adjusted (SA) unemployment rate downshifted to 7.1% in August from 7.5% in July and was a marked improvement over August 2020’s 10.2%. The not seasonally adjusted (NSA) unemployment rate, adjusted to the same calculation methodology as is adopted in the U.S., shrank to 5.8% from 6.2% in July and 9.0% in August a year ago. The R-3 U rate (i.e., its official title) was almost a match for the 5.3% NSA U rate rung up in the U.S. in August.

Some notable achievements were realized in Canada’s labour market in the latest month. The ‘total’ jobs recovery ratio in Canada, versus February-to-April’s huge drop last year, has now risen to 94.8%. But in ‘services’, and this is where breaking out the noisemakers is warranted, the jobs claw-back ratio has almost reached completion, 99.4%.

A full recovery (100.8%) in employment has been managed in the youngest worker cohort, those aged 15 to 24. The youth worker brigade saw many job casualties in the Spring of last year when measures to halt coronavirus infections shut down bars and restaurants and placed restrictions on the travel counted on to generate hotel and motel bookings.

Canadian construction employment in August moved ahead by +21,000 jobs. The year-over-year gain in construction payrolls has been +4.5%. The all-jobs increase in employment has been a little better, at +5.3%. And services employment has been another step up at +6.1% y/y.

‘Accommodation and food services’ employment within ‘services’ has been +10.1% y/y. Of course, this largely accounts for the strong jobs recovery rate among young workers.

Construction has performed better on the jobs front than manufacturing. The number of jobs with Canadian manufacturers in August was down by -5,000, leaving the y/y change at an unexciting +2.1%.

Returning to the provinces to wrap up, the lowest unemployment rate in the land in August was Manitoba’s 5.7%. Quebec, at 5.8%, barely missed being in a tie for number one. In third spot was British Columbia, at 6.2%.

Graph 1: Canada: Month-to-month Total Jobs Count Change

The 2020 data set featured some extraordinary month-to-month swings in employment (e.g., Apr 2020 = 2.0 million), requiring the vertical scale for its graph be much broader in range than for the graphs to either side of it.
Latest data point is for August, 2021.
Data sources: Household Survey, Statistics Canada.
Chart: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

Table 1: Monitoring the Canadian Employment Recovery ‒ August 2021

Canada's recovery ratio, versus the scary plunge from February to April of last year, has improved to 94.8%.
Data source: Statistics Canada.
Table: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

Table 2: U.S. and Canadian Jobs Markets ‒ August 2021

Canada experienced a slightly greater decline in total jobs count in the Spring of last year (-15.6% between Feb & April) than the U.S. (-14.7%) when lockdown measures were first adopted in both countries to combat the spread of COVID-19.
SA is seasonally adjusted / NSA is not seasonally adjusted.
U.S. labor data is from a ‘payroll survey’ / Canadian labour data is from a ‘household survey’.
Cdn NSA unemployment rate known as ‘R3’ is adjusted to U.S. concepts (i.e., it adopts U.S. equivalent methodology).
Data sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) & Statistics Canada
Table: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

Graph 2: Manufacturing vs Construction Employment in Canada

Both sectors managed nice jobs recoveries after last Spring's cratering, but they've struggled a bit lately. In 2000, the ratio of construction to manufacturing jobs in Canada was 0.36 to 1.00. Now, it's 0.84 to 1.00.
The last data points are for August, 2021.
Data source: Statistics Canada.
Chart: ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº.

Alex Carrick is Chief Economist for ÌìÃÀÓ°Ôº. He has delivered presentations throughout North America on the U.S., Canadian and world construction outlooks. Mr. Carrick has been with the company since 1985. Links to his numerous articles are featured on Twitter , which has 50,000 followers.


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