Quote:
Originally Posted by nwalbert
David Campbell's work is some of the weaker stuff in the Telegraph Journal so that gives you an idea on the quality. This table is misleading. They are comparing Dec 2010 to Dec 2011. In 2010 Saint John had record low unemployment rates. Saint John continues to lead the province in unemployment and has for quite some time. Although losing jobs is bad, the Dec 2010 rate was unsustainable.
The alarming part for both cities is that high paying jobs are being replaced with lower paying. Call center after call center in some regions.
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Just wanted to clarify with the StatsCan data:
Employment 2002-2011 (62.5 = 62,500)
Here is a leveled off version:
Quote:
Originally Posted by nwalbert
Saint John continues to lead the province in unemployment and has for quite some time.
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While this is true, I will offer a bit of info behind the unemployment rate. There is another stat called "
participation rate". This is the percentage of the population that is actively looking for work or working. In Saint John for example that rate is 63.4% whereas in Moncton the rate is 68.9%. An example to show you the power of the participation rate: if the participation rate in Saint John was 68.9, the unemployment rate would jump from 7.4% to 14.7%.
Another example would be of a fictional city that has an unemployment rate of 5%. Sounds great however the population is 100,000 and only 50,000 are in the workforce. Thus the "participation rate" would only be 50%. But because 47,500 of those 50,000 are working, it looks great. But the unemployment rate doesn't show the 15,000 people in that city who are on EI and Social Assistance etc. because they have given up looking for work.