unemployment

Virus fallout sends Sweden’s unemployment to highest since 1998

Agence France-Presse

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Virus fallout sends Sweden’s unemployment to highest since 1998

A closed-down ice cream stand is seen outside the Royal Palace in central Stockholm, Sweden on July 22, 2020. - The usually tourist-packed streets in the old town are deserted due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic. (Photo by ALI LORESTANI / various sources / AFP) / Sweden OUT

AFP

In Sweden, particularly young people are hit hard, with youth unemployment hitting its highest levels since 1993

The Swedish unemployment rate jumped to its highest level since 1998 in June, at nearly 10%, due to the economic fallout from the novel coronavirus, Statistics Sweden said Thursday, July 23.

The seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate among 16 to 64-year-olds, the statistics agency’s longest-running series, reached 9.4% last month, surpassing the 9% peak in early 2010 in the wake of the financial crisis.

The rise has been steep: in January unemployment was still at 7.2% and in May it hit 8.6%.

The all-time high of the indicator dates back to June 1997 when it hit 11.7% at the end of the severe economic crisis that hit Sweden in the 1990s.

According to unadjusted seasonal data, Sweden had 557,000 jobseekers in June, around 150,000 more than a year earlier. 

Particularly young people have been hit hard, and youth unemployment hit its highest levels since 1993.

Among 16 to 24-year-olds, seasonally adjusted unemployment reached 28%, compared to 20.4% in January.

Some 173,000 young people under the age of 25 are registered as unemployed, 50,000 more than before the pandemic hit Sweden.

The rapid increase is primarily due to “those who have had temporary contracts and not gotten an extension,” according to David Samuelsson, a statistician at Statistics Sweden.

Samuelsson added that youth unemployment has also been hurt by “the number of summer jobs decreasing.”

In neighboring Denmark, which had a much stricter lockdown but hasn’t seen the same number of cases, the official unemployment rate reached its highest level since 2012 in May, the latest data available. It then stood at 5.6%, up from 3.7% in February. 

In Norway, the unemployment rate was 4.9% in June compared to 3.8% in February, according to Statistics Norway.

The Scandinavian economies are expected to suffer deep recessions.

Sweden is forecasting a 6% drop in gross domestic product this year, according to the government. 

Norway is expecting a 3.5% drop and Denmark a 4.1% drop, according to their respective central banks. – Rappler.com

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