Greek
unemployment hits 25.4 percent in Aug, new record
Greece's
jobless rate rose for a 39th consecutive month to a new record of
25.4 percent in August, more than double the euro zone average,
Greece's statistics service ELSTAT said on Thursday.
8
November, 2012
A
crippling, austerity-fuelled recession continued to take its toll on
the labor market, putting Greek unemployment at more than double the
euro zone average of 11.5 percent.
The
jobless rate has more than tripled since the country's five-year
economic slump began in 2008. It now stands at 58 percent for those
aged between 15 and 24 years, compared with 20 percent in August
2008.
Greece's
economy is estimated to have shrunk by about a fifth since then. The
slump is expected to continue in 2013 when the government is set to
take budget cuts and tax increases worth 9.4 billion euros as a
pre-condition to receive more funds under its international bailout.
A
record 1.27 million Greeks were without work in August, up 38 percent
from the same month last year.
Greece's
August jobless rate was the European Union's second highest, behind
fellow euro zone sufferer Spain, whose unemployment rate stood at
25.5 percent, according to Eurostat.
The
European Commission forecast this week that the Greek labor market
would bottom out in 2013, with unemployment slipping to around 22
percent in 2014, the economy's first year of modest recovery after
six consecutive years of recession.
El-Erian:
Really Depressing Numbers Out of Greece
Mohamed
El-Erian
CNBC,
8
November, 2012
We
should feel a mix of great sadness and heightened concern upon seeing
the latest unemployment numbers out of Greece.
According
to the data released today, the official unemployment rate rose to a
stunning 25.4% in August, setting a new record. More alarming, the
jobless rate for 15- to 24-year-olds is 58% – 58%! And there is
reason to believe future employment reports will be even worse.
This
is a distressingly sad situation.
While
the informal sector can alleviate some of the pressure, it provides
only limited relief given the scale and scope of the country’s
enormous unemployment crisis – one that speaks to widespread misery
while suggesting a high probability of a “lost decade” for Greece
(we are already three years into the country’s crisis) AND a “lost
generation.”
The
fabric of any society risks enormous tearing if such joblessness
persists. Already, Greece is subject to waves of social unrest, some
of which have been quite violent. Only yesterday, TV screens were
full of images of rioting citizens in the streets of Athens.
No
wonder Greek popular rejection is at extremes not seen before in
recent European history; and it is encompassing economic, financial,
political and social dimensions.
Some
observers even believe that we are close to the point where the Greek
government could lose control of the country’s management. And as
the experiences of Egypt and Tunisia have shown, do not underestimate
what a grass root youth movement can achieve – especially with
social media greatly facilitating large-scale mobilization and
coordination.
In
view of the harmful consequences for so many people persisting for so
long, I would absolutely love to be find some hopeful aspects to the
Greek numbers. And I have tried really hard.
Yet
looking closely at the detailed data and what Greece and its European
neighbors are doing about them, it is hard to be positive. And my
deep mix of sadness and concern is not helped by the fact that
Greece, while certainly an extreme case, is not the only European
country with a severe joblessness problem. Upwardly trending youth
unemployment rates have already gone above 50% in Spain, and 35% in
both Italy and Portugal.
This
Greek tragedy looks certain to be with us for a long time to come.


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