Canadian payroll employment rises, average weekly earnings increase

4 weeks ago


Investing.com — According to a report released today by Statistics Canada, payroll employment in the country witnessed an increase of 26,800 (+0.1%) in January 2025. This follows a growth of 66,400 (+0.4%) in December 2024. On a year-over-year basis, payroll employment was up by 198,900 (+1.1%) in January 2025.

The monthly increase in payroll employment for January was observed in six out of 20 sectors. These include educational services (+26,200; +1.8%), retail trade (+9,800; +0.5%), and health care and social assistance (+7,300; +0.3%). However, the construction sector saw a decrease in payroll employment by 8,000 (-0.7%), along with accommodation and food services (-3,400; -0.3%) and information and cultural industries (-2,700; -0.8%).

In terms of job vacancies, there was little change in January. On a year-over-year basis, job vacancies were down by 136,700 (-20.6%) in January.

The report also highlighted that average weekly earnings were up 5.5% to $1,294 in January on a year-over-year basis, continuing the growth of 5.9% in December 2024. However, average weekly earnings saw little change from December 2024 to January 2025.

Job vacancies in January were recorded at 526,200, showing little change from December. On a year-over-year basis, job vacancies were down by 136,700 (-20.6%) in January. The job vacancy rate was 2.9% in January, down 0.1 percentage points from December (3.0%).

The unemployment-to-job vacancy ratio in January 2025 was 2.8, unchanged from December, but up from 1.9 in January 2024. This reflects a decrease in vacancies (-135,200; -20.5%, excluding territories), and an increase in the number of unemployed persons (+250,500; +20.2%, according to the Labour Force Survey).

Keep exploring EU Venture Capital:  US added 228,000 jobs in March despite Trump’s deep cuts to federal workforce | US unemployment and employment data

The report also noted that job vacancies decreased in four sectors in January: transportation and warehousing (-5,800; -18.9%), finance and insurance (-5,100; -27.0%), educational services (-2,800; -14.8%) and utilities (-700; -33.3%). Meanwhile, job vacancies in accommodation and food services edged up (+4,600; +7.1%) to 69,000.

Job vacancies in Alberta fell by 8,600 (-11.9%) to 63,400 in January, more than offsetting the increase recorded in December 2024 (+5,600; +8.5%). On a year-over-year basis, the job vacancy rate was down in seven provinces in January, with the largest decreases in Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick (NYSE:BC), and British Columbia.

Related Articles

Canadian payroll employment rises, average weekly earnings increase

Argentina targets $20 billion IMF deal as markets wobble

Exclusive-US suspends financial contributions to WTO, trade sources say



Source link

EU Venture Capital

EU Venture Capital is a premier platform providing in-depth insights, funding opportunities, and market analysis for the European startup ecosystem. Wholly owned by EU Startup News, it connects entrepreneurs, investors, and industry professionals with the latest trends, expert resources, and exclusive reports in venture capital.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.