Blue Finessence
Blue Finessence
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Services
    • Our Services
    • Company Formation in Europe
  • News
    • Internal News
    • General news
  • Contact
  • Your cart is currently empty.

    Sub Total: $0.00 View cartCheckout

Economy lost 41,000 jobs in July but unemployment rate held steady at 6.9%

Home / Finance / Economy lost 41,000 jobs in July but unemployment rate held steady at 6.9%
Economy lost 41,000 jobs in July but unemployment rate held steady at 6.9%
  • August 8, 2025
  • test
  • 51 Views

Economy lost 41,000 jobs in July but unemployment rate held steady at 6.9%

The Canadian economy shed some 41,000 jobs in July as young workers and the private sector bore the brunt of the losses, Statistics Canada said Friday. The unemployment rate held steady at 6.9% as the number of job seekers was roughly unchanged from June. The economy lost 51,000 full-time positions in July, and StatCan said the bulk of the losses were in the private sector. July’s drop in jobs partially offsets an unexpected gain of 83,000 positions in June.

Weakest jobs report in three years dampens start to third quarter

Economists had expected a slight job gain ahead of Friday’s release.

Doug Porter, chief economist at BMO, said in a note to clients that July’s jobs report marked the weakest in three years, according to the bank’s report card. He noted that total hours worked fell 0.2% in July, marking a poor start to the third quarter for Canada’s economy. “This is an unambiguously weak report … although it comes hard on the heels of an unambiguously strong report,” Porter said.

TD Bank senior economist Leslie Preston said in a note that the employment figures are often volatile in the labour force survey, but the unemployment rate is the key metric to watch. “The unemployment rate did hold steady, but given it was due to declining labour force participation, is not a very positive sign,” she said. “We expect the stagnation in labour force growth to continue, which will keep the unemployment rate from rising too high, despite weak labour demand.”

Young workers in particular continue to struggle in a tough summer jobs market. Youth aged 15 to 24 lost 34,000 positions last month while the employment rate for the age group fell to 53.6%—the lowest level since November 1998, outside the COVID-19 pandemic. StatCan said employment was down across several industries in July. The information, culture, and recreation sector led job losses with 29,000 positions shed, followed by construction, which lost 22,000 roles.

Trade-sensitive industries show signs of life amid U.S. tariff pressures

Offsetting those losses was an increase of 26,000 jobs in transportation and warehousing, marking the sector’s first job gain since January. Parts of this industry are affected by U.S. demand for exports and have faced disruption from the United States’ tariff campaign in recent months.

Manufacturing, another tariff-sensitive industry, posted its second consecutive month of modest job gains with 5,300 positions added in July. On a year-over-year basis, employment in manufacturing is still down by 9,400 jobs.

StatCan said the layoff rate—the proportion of people employed in June but laid off in July—was virtually unchanged at 1.1% from the same month a year ago despite the uncertainty tied to trade and U.S. tariffs. But many of those looking for work are struggling to land a job, the agency noted.

BoC to weigh weak jobs data ahead of interest rate decision

Of the 1.6 million people who were jobless in July, 23.8% were in long-term unemployment, meaning they’ve been on the job hunt for 27 weeks or more. StatCan said that’s the highest share of long-term unemployment since February 1998, again excluding the pandemic. Average hourly wages meanwhile rose 3.3% on an annual basis in July, up a tick from June.

The Bank of Canada will be gauging the strength of the labour market as it prepares for its next interest rate decision on Sept. 17. The central bank left its policy rate unchanged at 2.75% in its decision last week.

CIBC senior economist Andrew Grantham said in a note Friday that the “weaker than expected” employment figures support his call for a quarter-point cut at the Bank of Canada’s September meeting. The central bank will have a look at another set of jobs data for August, as well as a pair of inflation reports and a quarterly GDP update before its next interest rate decision.

Newsletter

Get free MoneySense financial tips, news & advice in your inbox.

subscribe now

Read more about jobs:

  • How to use AI to find a job—without annoying the employers
  • Canadians will see wages pick up as immigration slows, Conference Board argues
  • Is Canada in a recession?
  • Ottawa to expand the Canada Summer Jobs program for youth

The post Economy lost 41,000 jobs in July but unemployment rate held steady at 6.9% appeared first on MoneySense.

The Canadian PressSource

Share:

Previus Post
Pound drops
Next Post
G7 Rapid

Leave a comment

Cancel reply

Recent Posts

  • Independent assessment to support establishment of a Future Entity
  • Predisposizione, da parte dell’Agenzia delle entrate, delle bozze dei registri IVA, delle liquidazioni periodiche dell’IVA e della dichiarazione annuale dell’IVA di cui all’articolo 4 del decreto legislativo 5 agosto 2015, n. 127. Ulteriore estensione del periodo sperimentale stabilito con il provvedimento del Direttore dell’Agenzia delle entrate n. 183994 dell’8 luglio 2021 (provvedimento)
  • Istituzione delle causali contributo per il versamento, tramite modello F24, dei contributi all’INPS da destinare ad Enti Bilaterali (risoluzione n. 5)
  • Deadline for challenging your business rates valuation
  • Targeted financial support for aspiring social workers

Recent Comments

  1. validtheme on Digital Camera

Archives

  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025

Categories

  • Finance
  • internal news
  • Italy
  • Uncategorized
  • United Kingdom

Recent Posts

  • Independent assessment to support establishment of a Future Entity
    09 March, 2026Independent assessment to support
  • Predisposizione, da parte dell’Agenzia delle entrate, delle bozze dei registri IVA, delle liquidazioni periodiche dell’IVA e della dichiarazione annuale dell’IVA di cui all’articolo 4 del decreto legislativo 5 agosto 2015, n. 127. Ulteriore estensione del periodo sperimentale stabilito con il provvedimento del Direttore dell’Agenzia delle entrate n. 183994 dell’8 luglio 2021 (provvedimento)
    09 March, 2026Predisposizione, da parte dell’Agenzia
  • 09 March, 2026Istituzione delle causali contributo
  • Deadline for challenging your business rates valuation
    09 March, 2026Deadline for challenging your

Tags

Blue%20Finessence

Excellence decisively nay man yet impression for contrasted remarkably. There spoke happy for you are out. Fertile how old address did showing.

Contact Info

  • Address:CEO Blue FinEssence Ltd Piccadilly Circus 126 London
  • Email:director@bluefinessence.com
  • Phone:004407784915057

Copyright 2024 Bluefinessence. All Rights Reserved by Bluefinessence

  • About Us
  • Our Services