German jobs bonanza keeps economy swinging into spring
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[March 29, 2018]
By Michael Nienaber
BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany's jobless total
dropped more than expected in March and unemployment hit a record low,
adding impetus to a labor market that had already become the linchpin of
a consumer-led upswing.
Household spending has turned into the main source of growth in Europe's
biggest economy, propelled by rising employment, inflation-busting pay
hikes and low borrowing costs.
Federal Labour Office data on Thursday showed the seasonally adjusted
jobless number fell by 19,000 to 2.373 million, more than the 15,000
forecast in a Reuters poll.
Separately, regional data pointed to a rise in the national inflation
rate in March, though leaving it still well below the European Central
Bank's target of just under 2 percent for the euro zone, suggesting
price pressures remain muted.
Unemployment dropped to 5.3 percent last month from 5.4 percent in
February, the lowest since Germany reunified in 1990.
"The positive development of the labor market continued in March,"
Labour Office head Detlef Scheele said. He said companies created more
jobs with full social benefits and were continuing to look for more
staff.
The data showed that Germany's prolonged upswing is now also pushing
down the once stubbornly high number of long-term unemployed, which fell
by 9 percent on the year to 845,000.
Opposition parties have accused Chancellor Angela Merkel of neglecting
the long-term unemployed at a time when German firms are struggling with
unprecedented skill shortages.
In the coalition deal signed this month, the center-left Social
Democrats (SPD) persuaded Merkel's conservatives to help integrate the
long-term unemployed by creating 150,000 subsidized jobs at a cost of 4
billion euros ($4.9 billion).
Seasonally adjusted employment in Germany as measured by the
International Labour Organisation climbed to a record 44.59 million in
February, separate Federal Statistics Office data showed on Thursday.
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Ahmad Hosseini, 18-year-old trainee and former refugee from
Afghanistan is pictured through a plain vice at the training
workshop of Knipex, a 130 year-old family-owned pliers and tools
maker company in Wuppertal, western Germany, October 25, 2016.
REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/File Photo
TRADE THREAT
The rock-solid labor market is likely to further boost consumer
confidence and household spending in Europe's biggest economy, where
domestic demand has taken over from exports as the main growth driver.
The government has forecast a 2.4 percent expansion for this year, which
would be the fastest rate since 2011.
Consumer sentiment rose unexpectedly heading into April, according to a
GfK survey released on Wednesday, as shoppers became more upbeat about
their income and were more willing to spend.
"Full order books and the strong growth of the global economy make it
unlikely that the job boom will come to an end in spring," KfW chief
economist Joerg Zeuner said - though the threat of a trade dispute with
the United States had made firms far less optimistic about future
business.
"The losers of a spiral of protectionism between the U.S. and the EU
would be consumers and employees on both sides of the Atlantic," Zeuner
said.
Household spending has also been helped by moderate inflation, which has
broadly undercut average pay settlements to leave employees with more
disposable income.
Thursday's regional inflation readings, which are not harmonized to
compare with other euro zone countries, will feed into a nationwide
number due at 1200 GMT that a Reuters poll has forecast at 1.6 percent,
compared with 1.2 percent in February.
($1 = 0.8130 euros)
(Reporting by Michael Nienaber; Editing by Madeline Chambers and John
Stonestreet)
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