بنگلورو: ہندوستانی حصص جمعہ کو طویل عرصے سے بلند شرح سود کے نظام کے خدشات پر کم کھلے، کیونکہ سرمایہ کار فروری کے امریکی ملازمتوں کے اعداد و شمار کا انتظار کر رہے ہیں تاکہ یہ دیکھیں کہ کیا فیڈرل ریزرو کی جارحانہ مالیاتی پالیسی معیشت کو ٹھنڈا کرنے میں کامیاب ہوئی ہے۔
نفٹی 50 انڈیکس 1.09% گر کر 17,397.55 پر آگیا، جبکہ S&P BSE سینسیکس 1.14% گر کر 59,132.60 پر آگیا، IST صبح 9:19 بجے تک۔
تمام 13 بڑے سیکٹرل اشاریہ جات میں کمی واقع ہوئی، جس میں مالیاتی اور انفارمیشن ٹیکنالوجی میں بالترتیب 1.7% اور 1.3% کی کمی واقع ہوئی۔
ہندوستانی حصص میں وسیع پیمانے پر کمی ریاستہائے متحدہ میں فروری کے انتہائی متوقع ملازمتوں کے اعداد و شمار سے پہلے عالمی ایکوئٹی میں تیزی سے سلائیڈ کے بعد آئی ہے۔
ملازمتوں کی ایک مضبوط رپورٹ معیشت میں مضبوطی کی نشاندہی کرتی ہے اور ایک…
اسٹوڈنٹ فنانسایک یورپی فنٹیک جو نام نہاد کے ذریعے افراد کے لیے تعلیمی پروگراموں کو فنڈ فراہم کرتا ہے۔ آمدنی کے حصول کے معاہدے، نے فنڈنگ کے سلسلے A راؤنڈ میں €39 ملین ($41 ملین) اکٹھا کیا ہے۔
2019 میں اسپین سے قائم کیا گیا، اسٹوڈنٹ فنانس کے ساتھ شراکت دار تعلیمی اداروں اس طرح Ironhack کے طور پر اور لی ویگن روایتی بینک یا طلباء کے قرضوں کے متبادل کے طور پر خدمات انجام دینے والے سافٹ ویئر ڈویلپمنٹ، سائبرسیکیوریٹی، اور مصنوعی ذہانت جیسے شعبوں میں مہارت حاصل کرنے کے خواہاں افراد کی مالی مدد کرنے کے لیے۔
کمپنی کا کہنا ہے کہ اس نے AI ماڈلز تیار کیے ہیں تاکہ تمام شعبوں میں سب سے زیادہ طلب کی مہارتوں کو دریافت کیا جا سکے اور اس فرق کو پورا کرنے والے سب سے موزوں تعلیم فراہم کرنے والوں کے لیے اس کا نقشہ بنایا جا سکے۔
\”ہم عوامی طور پر دستیاب ملازمت کی فہرست کے اعداد و شمار کی نگرانی اور ٹریک کرتے ہیں، جو لیبر کی طلب میں رجحانات اور اتار چڑھاو کو ظاہر کرتے ہیں،\” اسٹوڈنٹ فائنانس کے شریک بانی اور سی ای او ماریانو کوسٹیلیک نے ٹیک کرنچ کو سمجھایا۔ \”ہم نظاماتی اور مارکیٹ کی تبدیلیوں کا تجزیہ کرنے کے ڈیٹا کا بھی استعمال کرتے ہیں جیسے کہ کمپنیوں کو \’سرسبز\’ بننے کے لیے حکومتی مراعات۔ اس سے ہمیں مستقبل کی نمو – یا زوال پذیر شعبوں کا ڈیٹا ملتا ہے۔\”
اس کے اوپر، کوسٹیلیک نے یہ بھی کہا کہ وہ تنخواہ کے اعداد و شمار کو ٹریک کریں، جو مخصوص مہارتوں کی طلب کی نشاندہی کر سکتا ہے۔
\”ہم مشین لرننگ کے ایسے ماڈلز تیار کر رہے ہیں جو اس ڈیٹا کو استعمال کرتے ہوئے مستقبل میں جاب مارکیٹ میں مخصوص مہارتوں کی طلب کی پیشن گوئی کرتے ہیں، اور مستقبل میں آمدنی کی سطح کی پیشن گوئی کرتے ہیں،\” کوسٹیلیک نے جاری رکھا۔ \”یہ ایک ایسا علاقہ ہے جس میں ہم تیزی سے سرمایہ کاری کریں گے۔
بے شک، Kostelec نے کہا کہ وہ اپنی نئی فنڈنگ کو اپنے اندرونی ڈیٹا اور AI صلاحیتوں کو اسٹریٹجک ہائرز کے ذریعے بڑھانے کے لیے استعمال کرنے کا ارادہ رکھتے ہیں، جس سے اسے ملازمت کی مارکیٹ کی طلب کی بہتر انداز میں پیش گوئی کرنے کے قابل بنایا جا سکتا ہے۔
طالب علم کے نقطہ نظر سے، آمدنی میں حصہ داری کے معاہدوں کا مطلب یہ ہے کہ گریجویٹس اپنی ٹیوشن کی ادائیگی صرف اس وقت کرتے ہیں جب ان کی تنخواہ ایک مقررہ حد تک پہنچ جاتی ہے، جس کے بعد وہ اپنی ماہانہ آمدنی کا ایک فیصد واپس اسٹوڈنٹ فائنانس کو ایک مقررہ تعداد میں قسطوں پر ادا کرتے ہیں جو کہ کمائی کی بنیاد پر اتار چڑھاؤ آتی ہے۔ اگر وہ کبھی ملازمت میں داخل نہیں ہوتے ہیں، تو وہ کچھ بھی واپس نہیں کرتے ہیں، حالانکہ وہ اب بھی ادائیگی کے ذمہ دار ہیں اگر انہیں کوئی ایسی نوکری ملتی ہے جو کمائی کی حد تک پہنچ جاتی ہے، چاہے وہ ان کے کورس سے مکمل طور پر غیر متعلق ہو۔
ہر طالب علم سے حاصل کردہ سود کی ادائیگیوں کے اوپر، StudentFinance کے ریونیو اسٹریم میں فیس شامل ہوتی ہے جو یہ کورس فراہم کرنے والے ہر طالب علم کے لیے وصول کرتی ہے جو کورس شروع کرتا ہے۔
اسٹوڈنٹ فنانس کے شریک بانی مارٹا پالمیرو (سی ایف او) اور ماریانو کوسٹیلیک (سی ای او) تصویری کریڈٹس: اسٹوڈنٹ فنانس
چوتھا صنعتی انقلاب
یہ فنڈنگ اس وقت آتی ہے جب ورلڈ اکنامک فورم (WEF) نے اس کی پیش گوئی کی ہے۔ 1 بلین سے زیادہ لوگ نام نہاد \”چوتھا صنعتی انقلاب\” نافذ کرنے کے ساتھ، دہائی کے آخر تک دوبارہ تربیت کی ضرورت ہوگی تیزی سے سماجی تبدیلی AI اور آٹومیشن جیسی ٹیکنالوجیز کے ذریعے۔ اس طرح، VC کی حمایت یافتہ طلباء کی مالی اعانت کے پلیٹ فارمز کی ایک بڑی تعداد سٹوڈنٹ فنانس سے ملتی جلتی ہے، بشمول سان فرانسسکو میں مقیم وائی سی ایلم بلیئر، نیویارک کا لیف، اور آرلنگٹن کا ویمو ایجوکیشن.
اسٹوڈنٹ فائنانس بھی ایسا ہی کرنے کی کوشش کر رہا ہے، لیکن یورپی مارکیٹ پر توجہ کے ساتھ۔ پلیٹ فارم اور فنانسنگ فی الحال اسپین، پرتگال اور برطانیہ میں دستیاب ہے، حالانکہ اس نے جرمنی اور فن لینڈ میں تعلیمی فراہم کنندگان کے ساتھ بھی شراکت داری کی ہے تاکہ SaaS کی بنیاد پر اپنا پلیٹ فارم فراہم کیا جا سکے، ادارے خود فنڈنگ کا انتظام کر رہے ہیں۔ اس سال کے آخر میں، اسٹوڈنٹ فنانس نے جرمنی میں اپنی مکمل سروس کو وسعت دینے کا ارادہ کیا ہے، اس نے پہلے ہی جرمن مالیاتی ریگولیٹر (بافن) سے ریگولیٹری کلیئرنس حاصل کر لی ہے۔
کوسٹیلیک نے کہا کہ افرادی قوت کو بہتر بنانے کی مانگ اس سے زیادہ کبھی نہیں رہی۔ \”ہم پورے یورپ میں اس خلا کو ختم کرنے کے مشن پر ہیں۔ ہمارا مقصد مستقبل کے لیے افرادی قوت کی تعمیر کے لیے اپنی کوریج کو بڑھانا ہے، خاص طور پر ٹیکنالوجی، AI اور موسمیاتی تبدیلی جیسے شعبوں میں۔\”
اس سے پہلے، اسٹوڈنٹ فنانس نے ایک اضافہ کیا تھا۔ تقریباً دو سال قبل $5.3 ملین سیڈ راؤنڈ فنڈنگ، اور ایک تازہ $41 ملین نقد انجیکشن کے ساتھ ہسپانوی سٹارٹ اپ کو اپنے قرض دینے والے سرمائے اور آپریشنل اخراجات دونوں کی حمایت کرنے کے ساتھ ساتھ اس کی خدمات حاصل کرنے کے عزائم کو تقویت دینے کے لئے اچھی مالی اعانت فراہم کی گئی ہے۔
مزید برآں، میڈرڈ میں مقیم کمپنی ادائیگی کے متبادل آپشنز کو شروع کرنے کے لیے بھی تیار ہے جس میں مقررہ قسطیں شامل ہیں، جو کہ ماہانہ رقم مقرر کی گئی ہیں جو طالب علم کی کمائی سے براہ راست منسلک نہیں ہیں۔
سیریز A راؤنڈ ایکویٹی اور قرض کا مرکب ہے، حالانکہ کمپنی نے اس تقسیم کو ظاہر کرنے سے انکار کر دیا ہے۔ اس میں کہا گیا تھا کہ راؤنڈ کی \”فنڈنگ کی صلاحیت\” کا 70% سپین اور جرمنی کو مختص کیا جائے گا، باقی رقم کا ہدف برطانیہ میں رکھا جائے گا جہاں اس نے گزشتہ سال نرمی سے آغاز کیا تھا۔
ایکویٹی عنصر کی قیادت Iberis Capital نے کی، جس میں Armilar Venture Partners، Mustard Seed Maze، Giant Ventures، Seedcamp، کی شرکت تھی۔ مونزو بانی ٹام بلوم فیلڈ، اور برطانیہ کے سابق ایم پی ایڈ وائیزی. قرض کا عنصر فرانسیسی اثاثہ مینیجر SmartLenders Asset Management نے فراہم کیا تھا۔
BASF, the world\’s largest chemical company, announced that it is cutting 2,600 jobs worldwide, including 700 jobs in production at its Ludwigshafen site. The company is also implementing an austerity program to save 500 million euros a year outside of production, half of it at the Ludwigshafen plant. BASF CEO Martin Brudermüller blames the slow market growth in Europe on over-regulation and high costs for production factors. In addition to the cost savings, the company is also closing several plants at the Ludwigshafen main plant, including the one for the Perlon precursor caprolactam and the one for the plastic precursor TDI. The changes at Ludwigshafen are expected to reduce annual fixed costs by more than 200 million euros from the end of 2026. According to the current site agreement, redundancies in Ludwigshafen are excluded until the end of 2025.
Saskatoon has seen remarkable job growth in the past year, with 84 per cent of all employment growth in Saskatchewan coming from the city. 16,700 more people were employed in 2022 than in 2021, and 59,000 more than in 2006. This growth was seen mostly in the services sector, with the majority of the growth in the construction industry and the wholesale and retail industry. The city is well-positioned for the future, with diverse economic fundamentals and good job opportunities for those living in Saskatoon. Follow our Facebook group to keep up to date with the latest news and developments in Saskatoon\’s job market.
منگل کے اسٹیٹ آف دی یونین خطاب میں، صدر جو بائیڈن نے افراط زر میں کمی کے قانون (IRA) کو \”موسمیاتی تبدیلیوں میں اب تک کی سب سے اہم سرمایہ کاری\” قرار دیا۔ کبھی۔ یوٹیلیٹی بلوں کو کم کرنا، امریکی ملازمتیں پیدا کرنا، دنیا کو صاف توانائی کے مستقبل کی طرف لے جانا۔\”
لیکن اس نے تعلیم میں کسی نئی سرمایہ کاری کا ذکر نہیں کیا تاکہ لوگوں کو ان تمام ملازمتوں کو بھرنے میں مدد ملے۔
آئی آر اے میں تقریباً 400 بلین ڈالر کے نئے اخراجات، موسمیاتی اور صحت کے بل پر صدر بائیڈن نے اگست میں دستخط کیے تھے، اس کے مطابق اگلی دہائی تک سالانہ 537,000 ملازمتیں پیدا ہوں گی۔ BW ریسرچ کی طرف سے ایک تجزیہ نیچر کنزروینسی کی طرف سے کمیشن. اور اس میں نجی سرمایہ کاری سے پیدا ہونے والی ملازمتیں شامل نہیں ہیں، جو بل میں ٹیکس مراعات کے ذریعے حوصلہ افزائی کی جاسکتی ہیں۔ جب ان کو شامل کیا جاتا ہے، یونیورسٹی آف میساچوسٹس ایمہرسٹ نے پایا کہ افراط زر میں کمی کا ایکٹ اس سے زیادہ پیدا کرے گا۔ 9 ملین نئی ملازمتیں اگلی دہائی میں.
آئی آر اے کے آخری موسم خزاں کے گزرنے سے پہلے ہی سبز ملازمتوں کا رجحان بڑھ رہا تھا۔ LinkedIn اطلاع دی 2022 میں کہ پچھلے پانچ سالوں میں، قابل تجدید توانائی اور اس کے پلیٹ فارم پر پوسٹ کردہ ماحولیات میں امریکی ملازمتوں میں 237 فیصد اضافہ ہوا، جب کہ تیل اور گیس کی ملازمتوں میں صرف 19 فیصد اضافہ ہوا۔ LinkedIn پر قابل تجدید ذرائع اور ماحولیات کی ملازمتیں اس سال کے آخر میں تیل اور گیس کی ملازمتوں سے کہیں زیادہ ہیں۔
\”تجارتوں میں بہت زیادہ کمی ہے اور اس سے بھی زیادہ ہونے والی ہے۔\”
سیم سٹیئر، اسٹارٹ اپ گرین ورک کے بانی
LinkedIn \”گرین سکلز\” کو بھی ٹریک کر رہا ہے جو تیزی سے ان صنعتوں کے لیے درج کی جا رہی ہیں جن کے بارے میں روایتی طور پر موسم سے متعلق نہیں سوچا جاتا ہے، جیسے پائیدار سورسنگ اور فیشن میں فضلہ میں کمی۔
اس نئی معیشت کو لوگوں کی طاقت سے چلنے کی ضرورت ہوگی۔ ایسے لوگ جن کے پاس آجکل زیادہ تر صلاحیتیں نہیں ہیں، ایسے مواقع کے لیے تیار ہیں جن کے بارے میں وہ شاید ابھی تک نہیں جانتے ہوں گے، یہ نہیں جانتے کہ تربیت کیسے کی جائے، یا وہ خود کو اس میں نہیں دیکھتے۔
لنکڈ ان رپورٹ میں کہا گیا ہے کہ \”سخت سچ یہ ہے کہ اس وقت ہمارے پاس گرین ٹرانزیشن کی فراہمی کے لیے کافی گرین ٹیلنٹ، گرین سکلز یا گرین جابز کے قریب نہیں ہیں۔\” \”مزدور کی منڈی میں سبز مہارت کی ترقی کی موجودہ رفتار کی بنیاد پر، ہمارے پاس اپنے آب و ہوا کے اہداف کو پورا کرنے کے لیے کافی انسانی سرمایہ نہیں ہوگا۔\”
میں نے تعلیم اور افرادی قوت کے رہنماؤں سے بات کی کہ خلا کو پر کرنے کے لیے ہمیں کیا کرنے کی ضرورت ہے۔ یہ ہے انہوں نے کیا کہا۔
1۔ سبز ملازمت کے راستوں میں سرمایہ کاری کریں۔
اگرچہ سرکاری اور نجی سرمایہ کاری کی بڑی مقدار ان سبز چراگاہوں کی طرف گرج رہی ہے، تعلیم اور افرادی قوت کے ماہرین کا کہنا ہے کہ اس میں سے بہت کم انسانی سرمائے کی تعمیر کے لیے وقف ہے جس کی ضرورت اس کام کے لیے ہوگی۔ یونین اپرنٹس شپ پروگراموں میں اکثر انتظار کی فہرستیں ہوتی ہیں، ہائی اسکول کیریئر اور تکنیکی پروگراموں کو کالج ٹریک کے حق میں دہائیوں سے نظر انداز کیا جاتا رہا ہے، اور بہت سے کمیونٹی کالج بجٹ میں کمی کا سامنا کر رہے ہیں۔
\”اگر ہم کل اپنے پروگراموں کو 80 فیصد تک بڑھا سکتے ہیں، تو ہم اپنی ایک ایک سیٹ کو بھر دیں گے،\” پیڈرو رویرا نے کہا، تھیڈیوس سٹیونز کالج آف ٹیکنالوجی کے صدر، لنکاسٹر، پنسلوانیا میں ایک پبلک ٹیکنیکل کالج، جس میں اس وقت تقریباً 1,300 افراد داخل ہیں۔ طلباء اور اگلے تعلیمی سال 1,500 کی توقع رکھتے ہیں۔ اس کے پروگراموں میں طلباء جو مہارتیں سیکھ سکتے ہیں ان میں پانی کے معیار کی نگرانی، برقی گاڑیوں کی مرمت، اور انتہائی موثر الیکٹرک ہیٹنگ اور کولنگ سسٹم کو انسٹال کرنے کا طریقہ ہے۔ لیکن اس قسم کا ہاتھ سے سیکھنا مہنگا ہے۔ رویرا نے کہا ، \”صرف ایک چیز جو ہمیں 1,500 نمبر پر رکھتی ہے وہ ہے لیبز اور مواد کی تعمیر کی لاگت اور خود سپلائی چین\”۔
ہریالی معیشت میں ملازمتوں کی بہت سی فوری ضروریات تجارت میں ہیں۔ تیزی سے بڑھتی ہوئی ملازمتیں جیسے ونڈ ٹربائن ٹیکنیشن اور سولر پینل انسٹالر، اور روایتی تجارت جیسے الیکٹریشن اور کنسٹرکشن ورکر۔ سبز کاروباری سیم سٹیر نے کہا کہ یہ وہ علاقے ہیں جنہیں امریکہ نے طویل عرصے سے نظرانداز کیا ہے۔
\”تمام تجارتوں میں بہت زیادہ کمی ہے اور اس سے بھی زیادہ ہونے جا رہی ہے،\” انہوں نے کہا۔ اس کا اسٹارٹ اپ، گرین ورک، موجودہ ہنر مند مزدوروں کے ساتھ موسمیاتی توجہ مرکوز کرنے والی کمپنیوں کی مدد کرکے خلا کو پُر کرنے کی کوشش کر رہا ہے، اور ان تجربہ کار کارکنوں کو سبز توانائی کی ملازمتوں کی تیاری میں کچھ مدد فراہم کر رہا ہے۔
سٹیئر نے کہا کہ ملک کو لوگوں کی مدد اور تجارت میں داخل ہونے کے لیے آمادہ کرنے کے لیے بہت زیادہ سرمایہ کاری کی ضرورت ہے۔ \”ہمیں تجارت کو زبردست ملازمتیں بنانے کی ضرورت ہے، اور اپرنٹس شپ کے ذریعے لوگوں کی مدد کرنے میں زیادہ غیر منافع بخش رقم کی سرمایہ کاری کرنا ہوگی۔ یہ ایک مالی اور جذباتی گینٹلیٹ ہے جب وہ اس سے گزرنے اور اس کے ساتھ قائم رہنے کی کوشش کر رہے ہیں۔
2. بدنامی کو کم کریں۔
اسٹیئر نے کہا کہ زیادہ سے زیادہ لوگوں کو \”عظیم ملازمتوں\” کی طرف کھینچنے کا ایک حصہ، تجارت کے لیے احترام میں اضافہ کر رہا ہے۔ اس میں مثالی نوجوانوں کو نشانہ بنانا شامل ہے جو آب و ہوا کا خیال رکھتے ہیں لیکن ہو سکتا ہے کہ انہوں نے اپنے ہاتھوں سے کام کرنے پر غور نہ کیا ہو۔ اس کی اپنی سافٹ ویئر انجینئرز اور اسٹارٹ اپ اقسام کی ٹیم بے ایریا کے ایک غیر منفعتی ادارے سن ورک کے ساتھ رضاکارانہ طور پر کام کرتی ہے، جو کچھ ویک اینڈ پر چھتوں پر سولر اور سولر ہیٹ پمپ کی تنصیبات کرتی ہے۔
تھاڈیوس سٹیونز کی رویرا نے کہا، \”یہ سب سے بہتر رکھا ہوا راز ہونا مایوس کن ہے،\” خاص طور پر جب اس راز سے دوسروں کو فائدہ پہنچ سکتا ہے: وہ جس اسکول کی سربراہی کرتا ہے اس میں 90 کی دہائی میں ملازمت کی جگہ کی شرح زیادہ ہے، اور ملازمتوں میں قابل اجرت ہے۔
رویرا نے کہا، \”ہم زندگی بھر پہلے سے پرانے تجارت کے بدنما داغ کے ساتھ جدوجہد کر رہے ہیں۔ اگرچہ یہ رویے ہو سکتے ہیں۔ تبدیل کرنے کے لئے شروع، 2020 کے ایک سروے میں پایا گیا کہ 54 فیصد والدین مثالی طور پر اپنے بچے کو چار سالہ کالج میں داخل کرائیں گے، اور صرف 16 فیصد چاہتے ہیں کہ وہ گاڑیوں کی مرمت جیسے کام کے شعبے میں داخل ہوں۔
3۔ رسائی میں اضافہ کریں۔
جولیا ہیٹن اوکلینڈ، کیلیفورنیا میں رائزنگ سن مواقع، ایک غیر منفعتی تنظیم کے ساتھ ہے۔ گروپ کا مواقع پیدا کرنے کا پروگرام پہلے سے قید اور دوسرے بالغوں کو جو تجارت میں کم نمائندگی کرتا تھا، خاص طور پر خواتین کو تجارتی اپرنٹس شپ میں داخل ہونے میں مدد کرتا ہے۔ یہ شرکاء کو اپرنٹس شپ سے پہلے اور بعد میں ایک سال کی مدد فراہم کرتا ہے۔ ان کا موسمیاتی کیریئر پروگرام۔ جو کہ 2000 کے بعد سے ہے، کم آمدنی والے طبقوں کے گھروں میں توانائی کی کارکردگی کو بہتر بنانے میں مدد کے لیے 15 سے 22 سال کی عمر کے افراد کو ملازمت دیتا ہے۔
ہیٹن نے کہا کہ لوگوں کو یہ سمجھنے میں مدد کی ضرورت ہے کہ وہاں کون سے مواقع موجود ہیں۔ \”ہمارے علاقے میں 28 بلڈنگ ٹریڈ یونین سے وابستہ ہیں۔ ہر ایک کی اپنی داخلے کی ضروریات اور مہارتیں ہیں۔ آپ کو کیسے معلوم ہوگا کہ آپ کے لیے کون سا ہے؟\”
\”اگر ہم کل اپنے پروگراموں کو 80 فیصد تک بڑھا سکتے ہیں، تو ہم اپنی ایک ایک سیٹ پر کریں گے۔\”
پیڈرو رویرا، لنکاسٹر، پنسلوانیا میں تھیڈیوس سٹیونز کالج آف ٹیکنالوجی کے صدر
نیو یارک کی سٹی یونیورسٹی زیادہ سے زیادہ طلبا کو آب و ہوا سے متعلق ملازمتوں کی طرف راغب کرنے کے لیے ایک نیا طریقہ آزما رہی ہے: یہ طلبہ کو اپنے ساتھیوں کو تعلیم دینے کے لیے شامل کرتی ہے۔ CUNY کے کلائمیٹ سکالرز پروگرام کے ڈائریکٹر بارچ کالج میں مینڈی اینگل فریڈمین نے کہا، \”ہمارے پاس شاندار طلباء ہیں، اور آپ واقعی ان سے جو کچھ سنتے ہیں وہ اچھا کرنے کی خواہش ہے، اپنا حصہ ڈالنا۔\”
یہ پروگرام CUNY سسٹم کے چار مختلف کالجوں کے طلباء کو منتخب کرتا ہے، مختلف شعبوں میں، فنانس سے لے کر صحافت سے لے کر ویسٹ مینجمنٹ تک، ایک سال کی فیلوشپ میں حصہ لینے کے لیے۔ یہ اسکالرز CUNY لیبز میں تحقیق کرتے ہیں، ایک انٹرن شپ مکمل کرتے ہیں اور مختلف شعبوں اور یہاں تک کہ دوسرے ممالک کے ماہرین سے موسمیاتی اثرات اور معیشت کو ڈیکاربونائز کرنے کے بارے میں سیکھتے ہیں۔
اس کے بعد وہ اپنے نتائج بشمول موسمیاتی ملازمت کے مواقع، تقریباً 2,500 فرسٹ ایئر باروچ کے طلباء کے ساتھ ساتھ مڈل اور ہائی اسکول کے طلباء کے سامنے پیش کرتے ہیں۔ ملازمتوں کے بارے میں حقائق کے ساتھ ساتھ، آب و ہوا کے اسکالرز قابل رہائش مستقبل کے تحفظ کے مشن کے بارے میں اپنے جوش و جذبے کا اظہار کر رہے ہیں۔ یہ ایک ایسا پیغام ہے جس کی ضرورت کو پورا کرنے کے لیے کئی بار بڑھانا پڑتا ہے۔
کے بارے میں یہ کہانی سبز نوکریاں کی طرف سے تیار کیا گیا تھا ہیچنگر رپورٹ، ایک غیر منفعتی، آزاد نیوز آرگنائزیشن جو تعلیم میں عدم مساوات اور جدت پر مرکوز ہے۔ ہمارے لیے سائن اپ کریں۔ اعلی تعلیم نیوز لیٹر.
ہیچنگر رپورٹ تعلیم کے بارے میں گہرائی، حقائق پر مبنی، غیر جانبدارانہ رپورٹنگ فراہم کرتی ہے جو تمام قارئین کے لیے مفت ہے۔ لیکن اس کا مطلب یہ نہیں ہے کہ یہ آزادانہ پیداوار ہے۔ ہمارا کام اساتذہ اور عوام کو پورے ملک میں اسکولوں اور کیمپسوں میں اہم مسائل سے آگاہ کرتا رہتا ہے۔ ہم پوری کہانی بیان کرتے ہیں، یہاں تک کہ جب تفصیلات میں تکلیف نہ ہو۔ ایسا کرتے رہنے میں ہماری مدد کریں۔
This section was produced by the editorial department. The client was not given the opportunity to put restrictions on the content or review it prior to publication.
Canada gained 150,000 jobs in January. Economists weigh in on what it means for the economy and the Bank of Canada. Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images
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The Canadian jobs market posted another blockbuster result, gaining 150,000 positions in January, Statistics Canada said on Feb. 10, outpacing analysts’ estimates for an increase of 15,000.
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The jobs report was “even more impressive,” said James Orlando, senior economist at TD Economics, because the “gains were concentrated in full-time jobs in the private sector.”
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Of the gain, 121,000 were full-time positions and 28,900 were part-time. The unemployment rate held steady at five per cent and the participation rate rose to 65.7 per cent from 65 per cent in December, the national data agency said.
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The economy has added over 800,000 positions since the start of the pandemic, Royal Bank of Canada said in its analysis of the jobs report, adding that “two-thirds of job gains were driven by prime-age workers” in the 25 to 54 age category.
It’s the second month in a row the strength of the employment market has taken forecasters by surprise. The economy, in December reported a gain of 104,000 positions, blowing past forecasts for an increase of 5,000 additional positions, although, the report was “heavily revised downward” by 33,000 positions, said Jay Zhao-Murray, an FX market analyst with Monex Canada, in an email, “and we may get a repeat of that scenario this month.”
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At the time, economists said the strong December numbers would prompt the Bank of Canada to increase interest rates, which it did at its Jan. 27 meeting, hiking its benchmark lending rate to 4.5 per cent.
Based on the latest jobs numbers, some economists say markets could start pricing in another rate hike. The Bank of Canada indicated last month that it would likely pause its hiking campaign if economic data over the next few months tracked along its expectations.
Here’s what economists are saying about the jobs numbers, what they mean for a potential soft-landing for the economy and interest rates.
James Orlando, TD Economics
“It was a blowout report for the Canadian labour market. The 150,000 jobs gain is one thing, but the fact that gains were concentrated in full-time jobs in the private sector, alongside people working more hours, makes this an even more impressive report. Although the seasonal adjustment should be called into question, the sheer size of this print points to a further boost to consumer spending and overall GDP to start the year.
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“Today’s report is sure to raise eyebrows at the Bank of Canada. Their conditional pause on further rate hikes is predicated on a slowing of economic growth and an easing in the labour market. The bank won’
t adjust course after one report, but it will be closely watching to see if this trend of massive job gains continues.”
Andrew Grantham, CIBC Economics
“Another month, another blockbuster job print for the Canadian economy …. Unlike during the latter part of last year, the strong job figure was also accompanied by an increase in hours worked (+0.8 per cent) as sickness-related absenteeism was closer to seasonal norms, which is a positive for GDP and suggests that the economy certainly isn’t on the verge of recession.
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“The Bank of Canada’s conditional pause on interest rates was likely done partly so that policymakers didn’t feel the need to respond to any single strong data print, no matter how strong, but rather assess how the economy is faring over the course of a few months. However, that won’t stop markets reacting to today’s strong data by pricing in a greater probability of further hikes, and pricing out rate cuts.”
Stephen Brown, Capital Economics
“The surge in employment and strong rise in hours worked in January suggest that GDP growth will be stronger than we anticipated this quarter. However, the decline in wage growth means that unexpected strength is unlikely to prompt the Bank of Canada to switch back to hiking mode.
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“The 150,000 jump in employment was 10 times as large as the consensus estimate. While the gain was partly due to an unusually large 63,000 rise in the population last month, amid strong immigration, the labour force increased by an even larger 153,000, thanks to a 0.3 percentage-point rise in the participation rate.
“Despite the bumper gain, the labour market data are unlikely to move the needle much for monetary policy, not least because wage growth declined to 4.5 per cent year over, from a downwardly revised 4.7 per cent — it was previously estimated at 5.2 per cent in December. Nevertheless, together with the 0.8 per cent month over month rise in hours worked last month, the data pour cold water on the idea that the economy is on the cusp of recession and suggest we need to revise up our forecast of a 1.5 per cent annualized decline in GDP this quarter.”
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Douglas Porter, BMO Economics
“Canadian employment soared 150,000 in January, the largest non-pandemic monthly rise on record and a loud echo of the rollicking U.S. jobs report a week ago. Even in percentage terms, the 0.75 per cent month over month gain is larger than anything seen in the 40 years before COVID.
“Note that actual, or non-seasonally adjusted, employment fell by 125,000 in January — prior to the pandemic, a “normal” January would see a job loss of 250,000-to-300,000 in unadjusted terms. So, evidently, there simply were far, far fewer layoffs than in a normal year at the start of 2023. Instead of an actual hiring boom, what we instead saw last month was a layoff freeze, given how hard it is to find workers in the current environment. To be clear, this is not to dismiss the strength in the headline number; the data are seasonally adjusted for a reason. It’s more to explain what the underlying story may be in this complicated backdrop.
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“Bottom Line: One always has to take care when reading a Canadian employment report — for example, the prior month’s huge gain was itself revised down (earlier) by more than 30,000 jobs. Still, even if there are some misgivings about the massive headline gain, the labour market is sending precisely zero signs of economic stress. For the Bank of Canada, the strong report must make them at least a tad nervous about their freshly-minted pause — we said the bar for any move would be very high, but the employment gain is pretty towering indeed. This is actually the last jobs report the Bank will see before it next decides in March, but their upcoming decisions will largely be determined by inflation, and the employment data may prove to be just loud noise, provided inflation continues to ebb.”
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Charles St-Arnaud, Alberta Central
“Today’s Labour Force Survey data suggest the labour market in Canada remains strong and resilient. The low unemployment rate continues to signal that the labour market remains very tight, something the Bank of Canada is closely monitoring. Moreover, the report also shows that wage growth, while slowing, remains robust, with average wages increasing by 4.2 per cent year over year.
“A robust labour market is a challenge for the Bank of Canada. As we have explained on numerous occasions, the bank needs to slow growth and create some excess capacity in the economy to fight inflation. This will likely lead to a rise in the unemployment rate and job losses. With this in mind, continued strength and tightness in the labour market may not be a welcomed outcome for the Bank of Canada.
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“The continued resilience of the labour market raises the odds that the bank will increase its policy rate at its next meeting on March 8. However, whether the bank hikes further depends on inflation, with the next release on Feb. 21, and the growth outlook. Nevertheless, it may require some signs that underlying inflationary pressures are not moderating as quickly as expected for the bank to hike at the March meeting.”
Carrie Freestone, Royal Bank of Canada
“Headline numbers conflict with recent Bank of Canada Survey data. The Bank of Canada Business Outlook Survey indicated business plans to hire staff have fallen alongside wage growth. This conflicts with the January Labour Force Survey data. Indeed, year-over-year wage growth has fallen to 4.5 per cent year-over-year, but hiring continues at a rapid pace and the unemployment rate held steady at a near record low 5 per cent. Any signs of labour market cooling require a deeper dive beyond headline numbers.
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“Job postings are still up 50 per cent from pre-pandemic levels, but have come down in recent months. It remains our view that labour markets will not remain this tight over the near term. The delayed impact of the Bank of Canada’s 425 basis points of hikes are still gradually flowing through to household and business debt payments and will ultimately erode demand, pushing unemployment higher through the end of the year. Moreover, with record high participation and fewer unemployed Canadians to fill jobs, job creation is not sustainable at the current pace.
“The Bank of Canada has indicated that rates will be held steady unless there is sufficient evidence that more restrictive monetary policy is needed. While the Bank of Canada will likely look past one strong jobs report, if additional reports prove to be stronger than expected, this would pose upside risk to the current terminal rate forecast of 4.5 per cent.”
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This section was produced by the editorial department. The client was not given the opportunity to put restrictions on the content or review it prior to publication.
Canada gained 150,000 jobs in January. Economists weigh in on what it means for the economy and the Bank of Canada. Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images
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The Canadian jobs market posted another blockbuster result, gaining 150,000 positions in January, Statistics Canada said on Feb. 10, outpacing analysts’ estimates for an increase of 15,000.
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The jobs report was “even more impressive,” said James Orlando, senior economist at TD Economics, because the “gains were concentrated in full-time jobs in the private sector.”
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Of the gain, 121,000 were full-time positions and 28,900 were part-time. The unemployment rate held steady at five per cent and the participation rate rose to 65.7 per cent from 65 per cent in December, the national data agency said.
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The economy has added over 800,000 positions since the start of the pandemic, Royal Bank of Canada said in its analysis of the jobs report, adding that “two-thirds of job gains were driven by prime-age workers” in the 25 to 54 age category.
It’s the second month in a row the strength of the employment market has taken forecasters by surprise. The economy, in December reported a gain of 104,000 positions, blowing past forecasts for an increase of 5,000 additional positions, although, the report was “heavily revised downward” by 33,000 positions, said Jay Zhao-Murray, an FX market analyst with Monex Canada, in an email, “and we may get a repeat of that scenario this month.”
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At the time, economists said the strong December numbers would prompt the Bank of Canada to increase interest rates, which it did at its Jan. 27 meeting, hiking its benchmark lending rate to 4.5 per cent.
Based on the latest jobs numbers, some economists say markets could start pricing in another rate hike. The Bank of Canada indicated last month that it would likely pause its hiking campaign if economic data over the next few months tracked along its expectations.
Here’s what economists are saying about the jobs numbers, what they mean for a potential soft-landing for the economy and interest rates.
James Orlando, TD Economics
“It was a blowout report for the Canadian labour market. The 150,000 jobs gain is one thing, but the fact that gains were concentrated in full-time jobs in the private sector, alongside people working more hours, makes this an even more impressive report. Although the seasonal adjustment should be called into question, the sheer size of this print points to a further boost to consumer spending and overall GDP to start the year.
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“Today’s report is sure to raise eyebrows at the Bank of Canada. Their conditional pause on further rate hikes is predicated on a slowing of economic growth and an easing in the labour market. The bank won’
t adjust course after one report, but it will be closely watching to see if this trend of massive job gains continues.”
Andrew Grantham, CIBC Economics
“Another month, another blockbuster job print for the Canadian economy …. Unlike during the latter part of last year, the strong job figure was also accompanied by an increase in hours worked (+0.8 per cent) as sickness-related absenteeism was closer to seasonal norms, which is a positive for GDP and suggests that the economy certainly isn’t on the verge of recession.
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“The Bank of Canada’s conditional pause on interest rates was likely done partly so that policymakers didn’t feel the need to respond to any single strong data print, no matter how strong, but rather assess how the economy is faring over the course of a few months. However, that won’t stop markets reacting to today’s strong data by pricing in a greater probability of further hikes, and pricing out rate cuts.”
Stephen Brown, Capital Economics
“The surge in employment and strong rise in hours worked in January suggest that GDP growth will be stronger than we anticipated this quarter. However, the decline in wage growth means that unexpected strength is unlikely to prompt the Bank of Canada to switch back to hiking mode.
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“The 150,000 jump in employment was 10 times as large as the consensus estimate. While the gain was partly due to an unusually large 63,000 rise in the population last month, amid strong immigration, the labour force increased by an even larger 153,000, thanks to a 0.3 percentage-point rise in the participation rate.
“Despite the bumper gain, the labour market data are unlikely to move the needle much for monetary policy, not least because wage growth declined to 4.5 per cent year over, from a downwardly revised 4.7 per cent — it was previously estimated at 5.2 per cent in December. Nevertheless, together with the 0.8 per cent month over month rise in hours worked last month, the data pour cold water on the idea that the economy is on the cusp of recession and suggest we need to revise up our forecast of a 1.5 per cent annualized decline in GDP this quarter.”
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“Canadian employment soared 150,000 in January, the largest non-pandemic monthly rise on record and a loud echo of the rollicking U.S. jobs report a week ago. Even in percentage terms, the 0.75 per cent month over month gain is larger than anything seen in the 40 years before COVID.
“Note that actual, or non-seasonally adjusted, employment fell by 125,000 in January — prior to the pandemic, a “normal” January would see a job loss of 250,000-to-300,000 in unadjusted terms. So, evidently, there simply were far, far fewer layoffs than in a normal year at the start of 2023. Instead of an actual hiring boom, what we instead saw last month was a layoff freeze, given how hard it is to find workers in the current environment. To be clear, this is not to dismiss the strength in the headline number; the data are seasonally adjusted for a reason. It’s more to explain what the underlying story may be in this complicated backdrop.
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“Bottom Line: One always has to take care when reading a Canadian employment report — for example, the prior month’s huge gain was itself revised down (earlier) by more than 30,000 jobs. Still, even if there are some misgivings about the massive headline gain, the labour market is sending precisely zero signs of economic stress. For the Bank of Canada, the strong report must make them at least a tad nervous about their freshly-minted pause — we said the bar for any move would be very high, but the employment gain is pretty towering indeed. This is actually the last jobs report the Bank will see before it next decides in March, but their upcoming decisions will largely be determined by inflation, and the employment data may prove to be just loud noise, provided inflation continues to ebb.”
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Charles St-Arnaud, Alberta Central
“Today’s Labour Force Survey data suggest the labour market in Canada remains strong and resilient. The low unemployment rate continues to signal that the labour market remains very tight, something the Bank of Canada is closely monitoring. Moreover, the report also shows that wage growth, while slowing, remains robust, with average wages increasing by 4.2 per cent year over year.
“A robust labour market is a challenge for the Bank of Canada. As we have explained on numerous occasions, the bank needs to slow growth and create some excess capacity in the economy to fight inflation. This will likely lead to a rise in the unemployment rate and job losses. With this in mind, continued strength and tightness in the labour market may not be a welcomed outcome for the Bank of Canada.
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“The continued resilience of the labour market raises the odds that the bank will increase its policy rate at its next meeting on March 8. However, whether the bank hikes further depends on inflation, with the next release on Feb. 21, and the growth outlook. Nevertheless, it may require some signs that underlying inflationary pressures are not moderating as quickly as expected for the bank to hike at the March meeting.”
Carrie Freestone, Royal Bank of Canada
“Headline numbers conflict with recent Bank of Canada Survey data. The Bank of Canada Business Outlook Survey indicated business plans to hire staff have fallen alongside wage growth. This conflicts with the January Labour Force Survey data. Indeed, year-over-year wage growth has fallen to 4.5 per cent year-over-year, but hiring continues at a rapid pace and the unemployment rate held steady at a near record low 5 per cent. Any signs of labour market cooling require a deeper dive beyond headline numbers.
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h2>
“Job postings are still up 50 per cent from pre-pandemic levels, but have come down in recent months. It remains our view that labour markets will not remain this tight over the near term. The delayed impact of the Bank of Canada’s 425 basis points of hikes are still gradually flowing through to household and business debt payments and will ultimately erode demand, pushing unemployment higher through the end of the year. Moreover, with record high participation and fewer unemployed Canadians to fill jobs, job creation is not sustainable at the current pace.
“The Bank of Canada has indicated that rates will be held steady unless there is sufficient evidence that more restrictive monetary policy is needed. While the Bank of Canada will likely look past one strong jobs report, if additional reports prove to be stronger than expected, this would pose upside risk to the current terminal rate forecast of 4.5 per cent.”
Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion and encourage all readers to share their views on our articles. Comments may take up to an hour for moderation before appearing on the site. We ask you to keep your comments relevant and respectful. We have enabled email notifications—you will now receive an email if you receive a reply to your comment, there is an update to a comment thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. Visit our Community Guidelines for more information and details on how to adjust your email settings.
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Canada gained 150,000 jobs in January. Economists weigh in on what it means for the economy and the Bank of Canada. Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images
Article content
The Canadian jobs market posted another blockbuster result, gaining 150,000 positions in January, Statistics Canada said on Feb. 10, outpacing analysts’ estimates for an increase of 15,000.
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The jobs report was “even more impressive,” said James Orlando, senior economist at TD Economics, because the “gains were concentrated in full-time jobs in the private sector.”
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Of the gain, 121,000 were full-time positions and 28,900 were part-time. The unemployment rate held steady at five per cent and the participation rate rose to 65.7 per cent from 65 per cent in December, the national data agency said.
Article content
The economy has added over 800,000 positions since the start of the pandemic, Royal Bank of Canada said in its analysis of the jobs report, adding that “two-thirds of job gains were driven by prime-age workers” in the 25 to 54 age category.
It’s the second month in a row the strength of the employment market has taken forecasters by surprise. The economy, in December reported a gain of 104,000 positions, blowing past forecasts for an increase of 5,000 additional positions, although, the report was “heavily revised downward” by 33,000 positions, said Jay Zhao-Murray, an FX market analyst with Monex Canada, in an email, “and we may get a repeat of that scenario this month.”
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Article content
At the time, economists said the strong December numbers would prompt the Bank of Canada to increase interest rates, which it did at its Jan. 27 meeting, hiking its benchmark lending rate to 4.5 per cent.
Based on the latest jobs numbers, some economists say markets could start pricing in another rate hike. The Bank of Canada indicated last month that it would likely pause its hiking campaign if economic data over the next few months tracked along its expectations.
Here’s what economists are saying about the jobs numbers, what they mean for a potential soft-landing for the economy and interest rates.
James Orlando, TD Economics
“It was a blowout report for the Canadian labour market. The 150,000 jobs gain is one thing, but the fact that gains were concentrated in full-time jobs in the private sector, alongside people working more hours, makes this an even more impressive report. Although the seasonal adjustment should be called into question, the sheer size of this print points to a further boost to consumer spending and overall GDP to start the year.
Advertisement 4
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
“Today’s report is sure to raise eyebrows at the Bank of Canada. Their conditional pause on further rate hikes is predicated on a slowing of economic growth and an easing in the labour market. The bank won’
t adjust course after one report, but it will be closely watching to see if this trend of massive job gains continues.”
Andrew Grantham, CIBC Economics
“Another month, another blockbuster job print for the Canadian economy …. Unlike during the latter part of last year, the strong job figure was also accompanied by an increase in hours worked (+0.8 per cent) as sickness-related absenteeism was closer to seasonal norms, which is a positive for GDP and suggests that the economy certainly isn’t on the verge of recession.
Advertisement 5
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Article content
“The Bank of Canada’s conditional pause on interest rates was likely done partly so that policymakers didn’t feel the need to respond to any single strong data print, no matter how strong, but rather assess how the economy is faring over the course of a few months. However, that won’t stop markets reacting to today’s strong data by pricing in a greater probability of further hikes, and pricing out rate cuts.”
Stephen Brown, Capital Economics
“The surge in employment and strong rise in hours worked in January suggest that GDP growth will be stronger than we anticipated this quarter. However, the decline in wage growth means that unexpected strength is unlikely to prompt the Bank of Canada to switch back to hiking mode.
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Article content
“The 150,000 jump in employment was 10 times as large as the consensus estimate. While the gain was partly due to an unusually large 63,000 rise in the population last month, amid strong immigration, the labour force increased by an even larger 153,000, thanks to a 0.3 percentage-point rise in the participation rate.
“Despite the bumper gain, the labour market data are unlikely to move the needle much for monetary policy, not least because wage growth declined to 4.5 per cent year over, from a downwardly revised 4.7 per cent — it was previously estimated at 5.2 per cent in December. Nevertheless, together with the 0.8 per cent month over month rise in hours worked last month, the data pour cold water on the idea that the economy is on the cusp of recession and suggest we need to revise up our forecast of a 1.5 per cent annualized decline in GDP this quarter.”
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“Canadian employment soared 150,000 in January, the largest non-pandemic monthly rise on record and a loud echo of the rollicking U.S. jobs report a week ago. Even in percentage terms, the 0.75 per cent month over month gain is larger than anything seen in the 40 years before COVID.
“Note that actual, or non-seasonally adjusted, employment fell by 125,000 in January — prior to the pandemic, a “normal” January would see a job loss of 250,000-to-300,000 in unadjusted terms. So, evidently, there simply were far, far fewer layoffs than in a normal year at the start of 2023. Instead of an actual hiring boom, what we instead saw last month was a layoff freeze, given how hard it is to find workers in the current environment. To be clear, this is not to dismiss the strength in the headline number; the data are seasonally adjusted for a reason. It’s more to explain what the underlying story may be in this complicated backdrop.
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Article content
“Bottom Line: One always has to take care when reading a Canadian employment report — for example, the prior month’s huge gain was itself revised down (earlier) by more than 30,000 jobs. Still, even if there are some misgivings about the massive headline gain, the labour market is sending precisely zero signs of economic stress. For the Bank of Canada, the strong report must make them at least a tad nervous about their freshly-minted pause — we said the bar for any move would be very high, but the employment gain is pretty towering indeed. This is actually the last jobs report the Bank will see before it next decides in March, but their upcoming decisions will largely be determined by inflation, and the employment data may prove to be just loud noise, provided inflation continues to ebb.”
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Article content
Charles St-Arnaud, Alberta Central
“Today’s Labour Force Survey data suggest the labour market in Canada remains strong and resilient. The low unemployment rate continues to signal that the labour market remains very tight, something the Bank of Canada is closely monitoring. Moreover, the report also shows that wage growth, while slowing, remains robust, with average wages increasing by 4.2 per cent year over year.
“A robust labour market is a challenge for the Bank of Canada. As we have explained on numerous occasions, the bank needs to slow growth and create some excess capacity in the economy to fight inflation. This will likely lead to a rise in the unemployment rate and job losses. With this in mind, continued strength and tightness in the labour market may not be a welcomed outcome for the Bank of Canada.
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Article content
“The continued resilience of the labour market raises the odds that the bank will increase its policy rate at its next meeting on March 8. However, whether the bank hikes further depends on inflation, with the next release on Feb. 21, and the growth outlook. Nevertheless, it may require some signs that underlying inflationary pressures are not moderating as quickly as expected for the bank to hike at the March meeting.”
Carrie Freestone, Royal Bank of Canada
“Headline numbers conflict with recent Bank of Canada Survey data. The Bank of Canada Business Outlook Survey indicated business plans to hire staff have fallen alongside wage growth. This conflicts with the January Labour Force Survey data. Indeed, year-over-year wage growth has fallen to 4.5 per cent year-over-year, but hiring continues at a rapid pace and the unemployment rate held steady at a near record low 5 per cent. Any signs of labour market cooling require a deeper dive beyond headline numbers.
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h2>
“Job postings are still up 50 per cent from pre-pandemic levels, but have come down in recent months. It remains our view that labour markets will not remain this tight over the near term. The delayed impact of the Bank of Canada’s 425 basis points of hikes are still gradually flowing through to household and business debt payments and will ultimately erode demand, pushing unemployment higher through the end of the year. Moreover, with record high participation and fewer unemployed Canadians to fill jobs, job creation is not sustainable at the current pace.
“The Bank of Canada has indicated that rates will be held steady unless there is sufficient evidence that more restrictive monetary policy is needed. While the Bank of Canada will likely look past one strong jobs report, if additional reports prove to be stronger than expected, this would pose upside risk to the current terminal rate forecast of 4.5 per cent.”
Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion and encourage all readers to share their views on our articles. Comments may take up to an hour for moderation before appearing on the site. We ask you to keep your comments relevant and respectful. We have enabled email notifications—you will now receive an email if you receive a reply to your comment, there is an update to a comment thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. Visit our Community Guidelines for more information and details on how to adjust your email settings.
This section was produced by the editorial department. The client was not given the opportunity to put restrictions on the content or review it prior to publication.
Canada gained 150,000 jobs in January. Economists weigh in on what it means for the economy and the Bank of Canada. Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images
Article content
The Canadian jobs market posted another blockbuster result, gaining 150,000 positions in January, Statistics Canada said on Feb. 10, outpacing analysts’ estimates for an increase of 15,000.
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Article content
The jobs report was “even more impressive,” said James Orlando, senior economist at TD Economics, because the “gains were concentrated in full-time jobs in the private sector.”
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Of the gain, 121,000 were full-time positions and 28,900 were part-time. The unemployment rate held steady at five per cent and the participation rate rose to 65.7 per cent from 65 per cent in December, the national data agency said.
Article content
The economy has added over 800,000 positions since the start of the pandemic, Royal Bank of Canada said in its analysis of the jobs report, adding that “two-thirds of job gains were driven by prime-age workers” in the 25 to 54 age category.
It’s the second month in a row the strength of the employment market has taken forecasters by surprise. The economy, in December reported a gain of 104,000 positions, blowing past forecasts for an increase of 5,000 additional positions, although, the report was “heavily revised downward” by 33,000 positions, said Jay Zhao-Murray, an FX market analyst with Monex Canada, in an email, “and we may get a repeat of that scenario this month.”
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Article content
At the time, economists said the strong December numbers would prompt the Bank of Canada to increase interest rates, which it did at its Jan. 27 meeting, hiking its benchmark lending rate to 4.5 per cent.
Based on the latest jobs numbers, some economists say markets could start pricing in another rate hike. The Bank of Canada indicated last month that it would likely pause its hiking campaign if economic data over the next few months tracked along its expectations.
Here’s what economists are saying about the jobs numbers, what they mean for a potential soft-landing for the economy and interest rates.
James Orlando, TD Economics
“It was a blowout report for the Canadian labour market. The 150,000 jobs gain is one thing, but the fact that gains were concentrated in full-time jobs in the private sector, alongside people working more hours, makes this an even more impressive report. Although the seasonal adjustment should be called into question, the sheer size of this print points to a further boost to consumer spending and overall GDP to start the year.
Advertisement 4
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
“Today’s report is sure to raise eyebrows at the Bank of Canada. Their conditional pause on further rate hikes is predicated on a slowing of economic growth and an easing in the labour market. The bank won’
t adjust course after one report, but it will be closely watching to see if this trend of massive job gains continues.”
Andrew Grantham, CIBC Economics
“Another month, another blockbuster job print for the Canadian economy …. Unlike during the latter part of last year, the strong job figure was also accompanied by an increase in hours worked (+0.8 per cent) as sickness-related absenteeism was closer to seasonal norms, which is a positive for GDP and suggests that the economy certainly isn’t on the verge of recession.
Advertisement 5
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
“The Bank of Canada’s conditional pause on interest rates was likely done partly so that policymakers didn’t feel the need to respond to any single strong data print, no matter how strong, but rather assess how the economy is faring over the course of a few months. However, that won’t stop markets reacting to today’s strong data by pricing in a greater probability of further hikes, and pricing out rate cuts.”
Stephen Brown, Capital Economics
“The surge in employment and strong rise in hours worked in January suggest that GDP growth will be stronger than we anticipated this quarter. However, the decline in wage growth means that unexpected strength is unlikely to prompt the Bank of Canada to switch back to hiking mode.
Advertisement 6
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Article content
“The 150,000 jump in employment was 10 times as large as the consensus estimate. While the gain was partly due to an unusually large 63,000 rise in the population last month, amid strong immigration, the labour force increased by an even larger 153,000, thanks to a 0.3 percentage-point rise in the participation rate.
“Despite the bumper gain, the labour market data are unlikely to move the needle much for monetary policy, not least because wage growth declined to 4.5 per cent year over, from a downwardly revised 4.7 per cent — it was previously estimated at 5.2 per cent in December. Nevertheless, together with the 0.8 per cent month over month rise in hours worked last month, the data pour cold water on the idea that the economy is on the cusp of recession and suggest we need to revise up our forecast of a 1.5 per cent annualized decline in GDP this quarter.”
Advertisement 7
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
“Canadian employment soared 150,000 in January, the largest non-pandemic monthly rise on record and a loud echo of the rollicking U.S. jobs report a week ago. Even in percentage terms, the 0.75 per cent month over month gain is larger than anything seen in the 40 years before COVID.
“Note that actual, or non-seasonally adjusted, employment fell by 125,000 in January — prior to the pandemic, a “normal” January would see a job loss of 250,000-to-300,000 in unadjusted terms. So, evidently, there simply were far, far fewer layoffs than in a normal year at the start of 2023. Instead of an actual hiring boom, what we instead saw last month was a layoff freeze, given how hard it is to find workers in the current environment. To be clear, this is not to dismiss the strength in the headline number; the data are seasonally adjusted for a reason. It’s more to explain what the underlying story may be in this complicated backdrop.
Advertisement 8
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
“Bottom Line: One always has to take care when reading a Canadian employment report — for example, the prior month’s huge gain was itself revised down (earlier) by more than 30,000 jobs. Still, even if there are some misgivings about the massive headline gain, the labour market is sending precisely zero signs of economic stress. For the Bank of Canada, the strong report must make them at least a tad nervous about their freshly-minted pause — we said the bar for any move would be very high, but the employment gain is pretty towering indeed. This is actually the last jobs report the Bank will see before it next decides in March, but their upcoming decisions will largely be determined by inflation, and the employment data may prove to be just loud noise, provided inflation continues to ebb.”
Advertisement 9
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Charles St-Arnaud, Alberta Central
“Today’s Labour Force Survey data suggest the labour market in Canada remains strong and resilient. The low unemployment rate continues to signal that the labour market remains very tight, something the Bank of Canada is closely monitoring. Moreover, the report also shows that wage growth, while slowing, remains robust, with average wages increasing by 4.2 per cent year over year.
“A robust labour market is a challenge for the Bank of Canada. As we have explained on numerous occasions, the bank needs to slow growth and create some excess capacity in the economy to fight inflation. This will likely lead to a rise in the unemployment rate and job losses. With this in mind, continued strength and tightness in the labour market may not be a welcomed outcome for the Bank of Canada.
Advertisement 10
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Article content
“The continued resilience of the labour market raises the odds that the bank will increase its policy rate at its next meeting on March 8. However, whether the bank hikes further depends on inflation, with the next release on Feb. 21, and the growth outlook. Nevertheless, it may require some signs that underlying inflationary pressures are not moderating as quickly as expected for the bank to hike at the March meeting.”
Carrie Freestone, Royal Bank of Canada
“Headline numbers conflict with recent Bank of Canada Survey data. The Bank of Canada Business Outlook Survey indicated business plans to hire staff have fallen alongside wage growth. This conflicts with the January Labour Force Survey data. Indeed, year-over-year wage growth has fallen to 4.5 per cent year-over-year, but hiring continues at a rapid pace and the unemployment rate held steady at a near record low 5 per cent. Any signs of labour market cooling require a deeper dive beyond headline numbers.
Advertisement 11
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Article content
h2>
“Job postings are still up 50 per cent from pre-pandemic levels, but have come down in recent months. It remains our view that labour markets will not remain this tight over the near term. The delayed impact of the Bank of Canada’s 425 basis points of hikes are still gradually flowing through to household and business debt payments and will ultimately erode demand, pushing unemployment higher through the end of the year. Moreover, with record high participation and fewer unemployed Canadians to fill jobs, job creation is not sustainable at the current pace.
“The Bank of Canada has indicated that rates will be held steady unless there is sufficient evidence that more restrictive monetary policy is needed. While the Bank of Canada will likely look past one strong jobs report, if additional reports prove to be stronger than expected, this would pose upside risk to the current terminal rate forecast of 4.5 per cent.”
Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion and encourage all readers to share their views on our articles. Comments may take up to an hour for moderation before appearing on the site. We ask you to keep your comments relevant and respectful. We have enabled email notifications—you will now receive an email if you receive a reply to your comment, there is an update to a comment thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. Visit our Community Guidelines for more information and details on how to adjust your email settings.
اب بھی کھلی ملازمتوں کی حیرت انگیز تعداد موجود ہے۔
جب تم کھو جانا ایک مہینے میں 100,000 نوکریاں، جیسا کہ جنوری میں ٹیک میں ہوا، یہ سوچنا آسان ہے کہ ٹیک نوکریوں کی مارکیٹ سے نیچے گر رہا ہے۔ بڑی کمپنی کی برطرفی کا سلسلہ تیز اور سفاکانہ رہا ہے۔ مائیکروسافٹ, حروف تہجی, ایمیزون اور سیلز فورسدوسروں کے درمیان، ہر ایک ہزاروں کی چھانٹی.
لیکن جیسا کہ اس معاشی بدحالی میں ہر چیز کے ساتھ، کچھ بھی ایسا نہیں ہے جیسا کہ لگتا ہے، یا یقینی طور پر اتنا واضح نہیں جتنا کہ 2008 میں تھا یا 2000 میں ڈاٹ کام کے بلبلے کے پھٹنے کے بعد جب معیشت سخت کریش ہوئی، اور یہ ایک طویل سفر تھا۔ استحکام پر واپس.
ان چھانٹیوں کا جواز آپریشن کے اخراجات میں کمی اور منافع میں اضافہ ہے، شاید پے رول کو کم کرنا جو وبائی امراض کے عروج کے دوران بڑھ گیا تھا۔ یہ ایک وحشیانہ کاروبار ہے، لیکن ملازمتوں کے اعداد و شمار پر ایک محتاط نظر ڈالنے سے پتہ چلتا ہے کہ شاید یہ اتنا برا نہیں ہے جتنا یہ پہلی شرمندگی میں ظاہر ہوتا ہے۔
روایتی دانشمندی بتاتی ہے کہ ملازمتوں میں ان کٹوتیوں کو بالآخر ہمارے ساتھ ملنا ہے، لیکن اب تک، ٹیک ورکرز – خاص طور پر انجینئرنگ، ڈیٹا سائنس، اے آئی اور سائبرسیکیوریٹی جیسی خصوصی مہارتوں کے حامل افراد کی – طلب میں برقرار ہے کیونکہ سپلائی کی تعداد سے پیچھے ہے۔ کھلی ملازمتیں.
بگ ٹیک کے ذریعے جانے والے لوگ شاید دوسری ٹیک کمپنیوں کے پاس نہیں جا رہے ہیں۔
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