Eurozone
unemployment hits record high of 11.4%
1
October, 2012
Just
out from Eurostat.
Unemployment
has hit a record high of 11.4%.
Note
that technically this is the same as last month, but that's only
because last month's 11.3% reading was revised higher.
The
report is below the dotted line.
---------------------------------
Euro
area unemployment rate at
11.4%
EU27
at 10.5%
The
euro area1 (EA17) seasonally-adjusted2 unemployment rate3 was 11.4%
in August 2012, stable compared with July4. The EU271 unemployment
rate was 10.5% in August 2012, also stable compared with July4. In
both zones, rates have risen compared with August 2011, when they
were 10.2% and 9.7% respectively.
Eurostat
estimates that 25.466 million men and women in the EU27, of whom
18.196 million were in the euro area, were unemployed in August 2012.
Compared with July 2012, the number of persons unemployed increased
by 49 000 in the EU27 and by 34 000 in the euro area. Compared with
August 2011, unemployment rose by 2.170 million in the EU27 and by
2.144 million in the euro area.
These
figures are published by Eurostat, the statistical office of the
European Union.
Among
the Member States, the lowest unemployment rates were recorded in
Austria (4.5%), Luxembourg (5.2%), the Netherlands (5.3%) and Germany
(5.5%), and the highest in Spain (25.1%) and Greece (24.4% in June
2012).
Compared
with a year ago, the unemployment rate increased in twenty Member
States, fell in six and remained stable in the United Kingdom. The
largest falls were observed in Estonia (13.2% to 10.1% between the
second quarters of 2011 and 2012), Lithuania (15.0% to 12.9%) and
Latvia (17.0% to 15.9% between the second quarters of 2011 and 2012).
The highest increases were registered in Greece (17.2% to 24.4%
between June 2011 and June 2012), Cyprus (8.0% to 11.7%), Portugal
(12.7% to 15.9%) and Spain (22.0% to 25.1%).
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