Job vacancies hit record high of more than 1 million in March: StatCan

0
453
stock photo workers
©CAN STOCK PHOTO/LUCIDWATERS

The CANADIAN PRESS

Job vacancies across Canada have reached an all-time high, ending a five-month decline, Statistics Canada said Thursday.

The agency said employers were seeking to fill more than one million positions at the beginning of March, up 186,000 or 22.6 per cent from February and 382,000 or 60.5 per cent from the prior year.

The non-seasonally adjusted job vacancy rate, which measures the number of vacant positions as a proportion of all positions, was 5.9 per cent in March, matching the record high in September 2021.

Record vacancies were reported in construction and the latest Labour Force Survey showed a tightening labour market.

The data shows all-industry seasonally adjusted employment grew by just 1,000 jobs, while the overall national unemployment rate dropped by another 0.1 percentage points to a new record low of 5.2 per cent.

Although Statistics Canada reported a drop in construction employment based on seasonality, the unadjusted employment figures showed a rise of 22,200 workers (1.6%) nationally in April.

Most provinces reported construction employment gains compared with March.

Newfoundland and Labrador reported the most significant at 13.6%, while the remaining provinces reported gains of less than 5%. Quebec, Manitoba, and Prince Edward Island reported marginal declines or no changes, while Saskatchewan reported a drop of 1.6%.

Nova Scotia was the only province to report a notable rise (+2.1 percentage points) in its construction sector unemployment rate in April.

The construction labour force continued to expand in April, with 15,300 workers joining or returning to the construction industry.

Over all industries, Stats Can also reported employers in the accommodation and food services sector were looking to fill 158,000 positions with the vacancy rate of 12.8 per cent being the highest of all sectors for the 11th consecutive month.

There were 109,000 retail positions available and record 154,000 vacancies in health care and 82,000 in construction.

Job vacancies were up in all provinces with the largest increases in Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador.

Before March, job vacancies had fallen for five consecutive months due to seasonal patterns with increased economic activity driving higher demand for labour.

A record-low unemployment rate of 5.3 per cent and record high 88.6 per cent labour force participation rate resulted in an average of 1.2 unemployed people for each job vacancy in March, down from 1.4 in February and 2.6 in March 2021.

Ratios were lowest in Quebec and British Columbia and highest in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Meanwhile, average weekly earnings increased 0.9 per cent from February and 4.3 per cent on a year over year basis, double the increase seen a month earlier. The Consumer Price Index increased 6.7 per cent in March, from March 2021.

Statistics Canada also said the number of people working in retail surpassed its pre-pandemic level for the first time in March.

Retail jobs rose 0.7 per cent or 14,800 positions from February to move 9,600 jobs ahead of where things were in February 2020.

labour forceThe sector’s employment was on par or higher than two years earlier in all provinces, except Ontario and Manitoba which were respectively 5,400 and 2,100 positions short of where they were before the COVID-19 pandemic prompted mass layoffs.

More than half of the subsectors within retail reported payroll employment increases in March, led by food and beverage (up 7,400 jobs) and clothing and accessories stores (up 3,300).

Grocery store employment was 2.8 per cent above its pre-pandemic level in March, but beer, wine and liquor store jobs were 5.1 per cent or 2,600 positions below its level in February 2020.

Overall, the agency said employment increased by 118,000 or 0.7 per cent between February and March to 17.3 million as public health measures eased and capacity limits were generally lifted.

The gains were driven by the services sector with seven provinces seeing increases led by Quebec which reopened bars, taverns and casinos on Feb.28.

All provinces except Alberta and Newfoundland and Labrador surpassed pre-pandemic levels in March.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

I accept the Privacy Policy

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.