German jobs bonanza pushes unemployment to record low
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[January 03, 2018]
By Michael Nienaber
BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany's unemployment
rate hit a record low as its jobless total fell more than forecast in
December, underpinning a broad-based economic upswing that augurs well
for further strong growth in 2018.
Consumers in Europe's biggest economy are reaping the benefits of a jobs
bonanza accompanied by rising real wages and ultra-low borrowing costs,
while its exporters ride a recovery tide that is pushing up demand from
the United States and China as well as other European states.
"There are no signs that the dynamic growth of the German economy will
stop abruptly," KfW chief economist Joerg Zeuner said in a research note
following Wednesday's Federal Labor Office data.
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"So we expect new employment records for 2018 and a further tangible
increase in real wages."
The seasonally adjusted jobless total dropped by 29,000 to 2.442
million, the data showed - more than double the 12,000 forecast in a
Reuters poll.
December's unemployment rate was 5.5 percent, the same as a revised
reading for November and the lowest level since German reunification in
1990, the office said. In 2017 as a whole, the rate fell to 5.7 percent
from 6.1 percent.
GETTING LEFT BEHIND
The strong labor market provides welcome relief for conservative
Chancellor Angela Merkel as she struggles to form a coalition government
more than three months after a national election.
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Employees handle packages in the new Amazon logistic center in
Dortmund, Germany November 14, 2017. REUTERS/Thilo Schmuelgen
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Data released on Tuesday showed Germany's workforce expanded last year to a
record 44.3 million, and the Ifo economic institute expects the rosy picture to
endure, with employment levels hitting 44.8 million this year and 45.2 million
next.
The Labor Office said there were 761,000 job vacancies in December, suggesting
companies are struggling to find skilled workers quickly.
But that offers scant comfort for those whom the economic upswing is leaving
behind.
The number of Germany's long-term unemployed has remained broadly unchanged over
the past ten years at around 1 million.
The German economy is expected to have grown by a calendar-adjusted 2.6 percent
in 2017 and it is seen expanding by 2.5 percent in 2018, according to the
Bundesbank.
The Federal Statistics Office will publish preliminary gross domestic product
growth figures next week.
For a table of the labor market figures, click on: (editing by John Stonestreet)
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