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Prince George unemployment rate drops to 3.6 per cent

Stats can data shows Prince George faring better than provincial average
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Prince George, like much of the West Coast, managed to avoid job losses despite the COVID-19 omicron variant bringing on additional restrictions.

The latest numbers from the January Labour Force Survey from Stats Canada, shows the unemployment rate for Prince George was 3.6 per cent which is a decrease of nearly half from 6.8 per cent during the same month last year.

The unemployment rate in Prince George was 4.1 per cent in December, which is notably a month-over-month decline of half a point.

That is also lower than the provincial rate which is now at 5.1 per cent.

B.C. added 4,200 jobs in January at the same time the country as a whole posted a loss of 200,000 jobs, according to the Statistics Canada data.

“The Omicron wave and associated lockdowns forced many businesses to adjust on the fly. They did this by cutting jobs and hours significantly,” TD senior economist James Orlando said in a note, referring to the national numbers.

“Notably, all of the increase in unemployment was due to more people on temporary lay-off or scheduled to start a job in the near future, suggesting the setback will be short lived.”

The province’s unemployment fell 0.3 percentage points between December and January to land at 5.1 per cent, while Canada saw its unemployment rate increase 0.5 percentage points to 6 per cent.

B.C.’s biggest gains came in retail/wholesale trade (+6,800 jobs); natural resources (+3,800 jobs); and finance, insurance, real estate, rental and leasing (+3,900 jobs).

The biggest losses came in agriculture (-3,700 jobs); business, building and other support services (-5,500 jobs); and construction (-2,000 jobs).

Ontario (-145,700 jobs) and Quebec (-63,000 jobs), the country’s two most populace provinces, were home to the vast majority of Canada’s losses last month.

Those provinces have also imposed tighter restrictions amid the pandemic compared with B.C.

“The reality is that no one will be seriously surprised by these figures, since it is almost a carbon copy of the setbacks seen in the second and third waves," BMO chief economist Douglas Porter said in a note.

“As the restrictions have begun to ease in recent days in Ontario and Quebec, look for a sturdy rebound in jobs in the next two months.”

Statistics Canada data was collected only through the first half of January, leaving question marks hanging over the full extent the Omicron wave has had on the West Coast economy last month.

- with Files form Tyler Orton, Business in Vancouver