Eurozone unemployment hits new record high of 11.8%
Unemployment in the Eurozone has reached a record high, increasing to 11.8 per cent in November, the EU's statistics office reports. Spain and Greece are suffering the most with roughly one in four workers unemployed.
People
wait to enter a government-run employment office in Madrid January 3,
2013. (Reuters/Susana Vera)
RT,
8
January, 2013
On
Tuesday Eurostat released the detailed report about November’s unemployment figures along with data on the past 12 months.
According
to the report, some 2 million people throughout the Eurozone lost
their jobs between November 2011 and November 2012. The total number
of jobless workers reached 18.8 million.
Spain
and Greece top the list of countries with the highest unemployment
rate, with 26.6 and 26.0 per cent (for September) respectively. The
lowest rates were registered in Austria, Luxembourg, Germany and the
Netherlands.
The
Latest figures also show that youth unemployment has risen from 24.4%
from 23.9% a month ago.
But
while youth unemployment was at 8.1% in Germany and 9.7% in the
Netherlands, in Spain and Greece it was 56.5% and 57.6% respectively.
In
total Eurostat reported that 18,820,000 people are now out of work in
the euro area.
Both
Spain and Greece have been rattled by massive, sometimes violent,
protests and numerous strikes throughout 2012, as people vent their
frustration to severe cuts and rising unemployment.
The
anti-austerity protests came to a climax on November 14th when
millions of people took to the streets in 23 countries across Europe
to mark the European Day of Action and Solidarity.
Greece,
which is balancing on the brink of default, has had to pass drastic
austerity measures to qualify for its rescue package from Eurozone
members, which have had a devastating impact on the lives of many
Greeks.
In
mid-December, Eurozone finance ministers approved the release of
another 34-billion-euro rescue package for struggling Greece. The
decision was preceded by weeks of heated negotiations.
As
well as sky-high unemployment, salaries in the public sector and
pensions have been slashed by almost 40% as Greece racks up austerity
measures to qualify for EU bailouts.
Greece
has been the epicenter of many of the protests, with debt-laden
Greeks staging massive general strikes.
As
people get poorer and tensions grow within Greece, far-right
movements including the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn Party, have been on the
rise.
In
April last year a Greek pensioner shot himself in-front of parliament
apparently out of financial desperation. In a suicide note he said
that he decided to take his own life so he wouldn’t have “to
fish around in the garbage for my sustenance” and
according to some witnesses who were nearby he shouted “so
I won’t have to leave debts for my children” before
turning the gun on himself.
The
total number of suicides in Greece has dramatically increased since
the austerity program begun. Prior to the economic crisis, Greece had
one of the lowest suicide rates in Europe at 2.8 for every 100,000
inhabitants. This figure has now almost doubled with 600 suicides in
both 2010 and 2011 and the number of attempted suicides is also
rising.
As
queues form outside job centers and soup kitchens across the Eurozone
the Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras told reporters in Berlin
Tuesday that his country is meeting its pledges on economic reforms,
“the glass is half full. We are delivering and Europe is helping,”
he said.
Italy
has also seen protests at austerity and soaring unemployment. The
latest figures show that the number of young people out of work in
Italy is 37.1%, the highest since records began in 1992.
In
spring last year a 78-year old pensioner from Sicily threw herself
off her third floor balcony after her pension was cut by 25% and she
was reportedly unable to make ends meet.
Another
Italian, a picture frame maker from Rome, hung himself
citing “overwhelming
economic problems” while
a further two men set themselves on fire in two separate incidents
also citing money problems, although both survived, having sustained
severe burns.
Spain,
the Eurozone’s fourth largest economy, also has the highest
unemployment rate in the entire European Union, with Greece in second
place followed by Portugal and Italy. It is estimated that more than
400,000 Spanish families have lost their homes since the beginning of
the financial crisis in 2007 due to unpaid rent and mortgages.
Since
last autumn the Portuguese, too, have joined the swelling ranks of
Europe’s discontent.
The
government stepped up austerity last September with more steep tax
increases and public sector job cuts.For many in Portugal it was one
step too far, driving tens of thousands into the streets in the
largest protest of Portugal’s crisis.
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