The number of people looking for work in Germany rose in August
Published:
6 September 2004 y., Monday
The number of people looking for work in Germany rose in August, as the modest economic recovery was not enough to create any new jobs in the eurozone's biggest economy, official data showed on Thursday.
The Bundesbank, Germany's central bank, calculated that the number of people out of work last month rose by 24,000 to 4.414 million, equivalent to 10.6 percent of the working population.
Unemployment in Germany has been increasing steadily since the beginning of the year, with a total 145,000 more people on the dole in August than in January. The Bundesbank data are seasonally adjusted.
Raw or unadjusted data published separately the Federal Labor Agency in Nuremberg painted a slightly more positive picture, with the unadjusted jobless total falling by 13,400 to 4.347 million.
But that decline was solely a result of seasonal factors and not any fundamental improvement in the labor market -- unemployment usually decreases at this time of year at the start of the school term and as factories re-open after the summer holidays.
In regional terms, the seasonally adjusted jobless total in western Germany increased by 18,000 to 2.809 million, equivalent to a jobless rate of 8.6 percent.
Šaltinis:
dw-world.de
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Pope John Paul II met on November 18 with a delegation of religious leaders from Azerbaijan
more »
Ashgabat More Affluent, But Poisoned By 'Atmosphere Of Political Repression'
more »
Kazakhstan’s National Security Committee liquidated an Al-Qaeda group
more »
Protesters were dug in last night at a government office in southern Russia, demanding the resignation of the region's president after gangland-style killings
more »
Many more workers have arrived in Britain from Eastern Europe since enlargement of the EU in May than the Government predicted, figures showed yesterday
more »
Touted by the East German leadership as a barrier against "fascist provocation," the Wall was really an attempt to stop waves of skilled workers and educated people leaving a repressive state
more »
After a year in jail on charges of fraud and tax evasion, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, Russia's richest man, has told his family that he will give up making money if he is released
more »
A train crash in southern England has left at least six people dead
more »
Tens of thousands of supporters of presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko filled Kiev's main square Saturday
more »
Estonia's six months in EU have brought no massive changes for Finland
more »