ASSESSMENTS

Unemployment in Spain Persists Despite Positive Indicators

Jan 24, 2014 | 11:05 GMT

Unemployment in Spain Persists Despite Positive Indicators
People wait to enter an unemployment office in Madrid on Oct. 2, 2013.

(Pablo Blazquez Dominguez/Getty Images)

Summary

On Jan. 23, Spain's statistics office announced that while 8,400 fewer people were registered as unemployed in the fourth quarter of 2013 compared to the third quarter, the country's unemployment rate remained essentially unchanged — it rose slightly to 26.03 percent from 25.98 percent the previous quarter. This is because the Spanish workforce keeps shrinking as people emigrate, retire or simply stop looking for a job.

This trend is important for the future of the Spanish economy, because a smaller workforce means, among other things, a smaller number of people paying work-related taxes. It also means that more and more people have lost hope of finding a job and stopped looking. This ultimately reduces their chances of finding a job if they decide to resume their search, due to the longer period of time since their last employment and the potential loss of skills or expertise. Finally, the Spanish labor market is becoming more unstable; in 2013, the number of part-time jobs increased while the number of full-time jobs dropped. As a result, 2014 could see a marginal reduction of unemployment in Spain, but it will stay at critically high levels for the foreseeable future and remain a key political and economic challenge for authorities in Madrid.

The country's shrinking workforce and lack of permanent full-time jobs temper any optimistic outlook....

Subscribe to view this article

Subscribe Now

Subscribe

Already have an account?