Director General for the Statistical Institute of Jamaica (STATIN), Carol Coy, addresses the agency’s quarterly briefing at The Knutsford Court Hotel in New Kingston, on Friday (January 17). Yhomo Hutchinson Photos
#KINGSTON, Jan. 17 (JIS): The Statistical Institute of Jamaica (STATIN) is reporting that the country’s unemployment rate has fallen to a new record low of 7.2 per cent, based on the October 2019 Labour Force Survey.
Director
General, Carol Coy, says this is 1.5 percentage points lower than the 8.7 per
cent out-turn for the corresponding period in 2018. It is also 0.6 per cent
below the 7.8 per cent recorded in the April 2019 survey.
Additionally,
Ms. Coy said the total number of persons in jobs as at October rose by 2.4 per
cent, compared to the corresponding period in 2018.
She
was speaking during STATIN’s quarterly media briefing at The Knutsford Court
Hotel in New Kingston on Friday (January 17).
Ms.
Coy said a breakdown of the data shows that the total number of unemployed persons
as at October 2019 stood at 96,700, representing a 16.4 per cent decline over
the previous year.
She
noted that female unemployment fell by 16,000 persons to 53,400, while the
total number of unemployed males decreased by 3,000 individuals to 43,300.
The
Director General said the out-turn for females represented a 2.6 percentage
point decline to 8.6 per cent, while the rate for the males dipped from 6.4 per
cent to six per cent.
Additionally,
she said the unemployment rate for youth aged 14 to 24 fell from 24.9 per cent
in October 2018 to 21.1 per cent last year.
“The
unemployment rate for male youth decreased by 3.6 percentage points to 18.2 per
cent in October 2019 [while] the unemployment rate for female youth declined by
3.9 percentage points to 24.7 per cent,” she added.
Ms. Coy said the number of persons in jobs as at October rose by 29,200 persons (2.4 per cent) to 1,248,400, relative to the corresponding period in 2018. The overall labour force increased by 10,200 persons to 1,345,100.
She
informed that increased female employment, which rose by 18,600 persons to
565,600, was nearly twice that of males, which went up 10,600 to 682,800.
The
number of persons classified as being outside the labour force, as at October
2019, totalled 741,500, which was 10,800 (1.4 per cent) fewer than the 752,300
recorded the previous year.