Audio By Carbonatix
German unemployment has fallen as the country appeared to bounce back from the initial shock of the coronavirus pandemic. However, a second partial lockdown looks set to darken the economic outlook.
The jobless figure for Germany dropped more than expected on Thursday, as Europe's largest economy appeared to be making a recovery from the first wave of Covid-19.
The number of people out of work fell by more than 35,000 to 2.86 million in concrete terms, according to the seasonally adjusted figures. The unemployment rate eased to 6.2% from 6.3% in the previous month, a far higher drop than had been expected.
The rise in unemployment in Germany and across Europe amid the coronavirus pandemic has been relatively modest by international standards, with employers taking advantage of government-backed salary support schemes.
Under Germany's furlough program, the Federal Labor Agency (BA) pays some 60% of the salary of employees who are on reduced or zero hours.
The BA said that in August, the last month for which there are reliable figures, the number of people receiving such payments fell sharply from 3.32 million in July to 2.58 million.
The data suggested that household spending should help support growth in the fourth quarter of the year. The BA said it represented a "noticeable improvement."
"Unemployment and underemployment fell sharply... However, the labor market is still showing clear signs of the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic," BA chairman Detlef Scheele said.
Despite the good news, a partial lockdown amid a second wave of the virus is expected to harm consumption.
Banking group ING's chief economist in Germany, Carsten Brzeski, told DW the latest wave of restrictions would see growth slip.
"In my view, we will definitely see a contraction of the German economy in the fourth quarter, the only question is how severe this contraction will be," he told DW.
Germany began to ease coronavirus restrictions in late April, but Chancellor Angela Merkel Wednesday announced a wide range of new regulations to take effect on Monday for most of November. The measures include the closure of bars and restaurants, limits on social contacts and bans on public events.
Latest Stories
-
Iran is a threat to Middle East stability – Israeli Ambassador to Ghana
3 minutes -
Mahama inaugurates NAPRM Governing Council ahead of historic ‘Second-Generation’ Peer Review
10 minutes -
WUSC–ACTIVATE Project equips over 200 youth with practical agriculture skills in Asante Mampong
20 minutes -
IMANI brief: Ghana’s 24-hour economy needs systems, not new authorities
24 minutes -
Tems becomes first African female artiste to have 7 entries on Billboard Hot 100
30 minutes -
Gov’t declares Wednesday as ‘Fugu Day’ to promote Ghanaian heritage
31 minutes -
Interior Ministry trains police officers on Armoured Bullion Vehicle operations
38 minutes -
OSP releases Baba Jamal on self-recognisance bail after interrogation
41 minutes -
BoG advocates practical framework to support orderly listing of banks on GSE
44 minutes -
Baba Jamal interrogated by Special Prosecutor over alleged vote-buying claims
55 minutes -
Hooked on survival: Human impact of climate-driven illegal fishing
1 hour -
Agric economist demands end to political control in cocoa industry
2 hours -
Speaker directs business committee to schedule anti-LGBTQ bill for parliamentary consideration
2 hours -
Inflation drop doesn’t mean prices have fallen – Oppong Nkrumah clarifies
2 hours -
Kenya to confront Russia over ‘unacceptable’ use of its nationals in combat
2 hours
