unemployment

Unemployment in virus-hit Brazil reaches 13.3%, worst in 3 years

Agence France-Presse

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Unemployment in virus-hit Brazil reaches 13.3%, worst in 3 years

A street vendor wearing a face mask is seen in the city centre of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on July 15, 2020, amid the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. - The pandemic has killed at least 579,838 people worldwide, including 74,133 in Brazil, since it surfaced in China late last year and more than 13.4 million have been infected, according to an AFP tally at 1900 GMT on Wednesday based on official sources. (Photo by Mauro PIMENTEL / AFP)

AFP

Brazil loses 8.9 million jobs in the 2nd quarter of 2020, with 6 million of these in the informal sector

Virus-hit Brazil’s unemployment rate rose to 13.3% in the April-June quarter, its highest in 3 years, according to official figures released on Thursday, August 6, that show 8.9 million jobs lost during the period due to the pandemic.  

The figure represents a rise of 1.1 percentage points over the previous quarter, and is the highest since the March-May 2017 quarter, according to the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE).

Most Brazilian states began lifting lockdown measures in June, although the country’s COVID-19 death toll is approaching 100,000 – the second highest tally in the world.

The IBGE said 12.8 million people are looking for work in Latin America’s biggest economy, while 83.3 million Brazilians were employed in the 2nd quarter, 9.6% less than in the 1st. 

“Of the 8.9 million people who lost their jobs, 6 million were working in the informal sector,” without an employment contract or the equivalent, IBGE analyst Adriana Beringuy said in a release.

Nearly a quarter of the jobs lost – 2.1 million – were in the trade sector, hit particularly hard by lockdown measures aimed at containing the pandemic. 

Another hard-hit sector was domestic workers, such as cleaners and child caregivers, with a 21% drop in the number of jobs compared to the 1st quarter. 

In the 2nd half of the year, the IBGE identified a record number of “discouraged” people, who would be able to work, but have given up looking for work. 

“Most people who are not looking for a job say they had to stop looking because of the pandemic,” said Beringuy. 

At the end of July, Adolfo Sachsida, the government’s secretary for economic policy, told the daily Folha de S. Paulo in an interview that he feared unemployment figures would “skyrocket” in September.

“We have to be ready to deal with this problem, which is going to hit Brazilian society hard,” he said. 

On Wednesday, August 5, the Central Bank lowered its key rate by 0.25 points to 2%, a new historic low, in an attempt to revive the economy.

Industrial production fell by 10.9% in the 1st half of the year compared with the first 6 months of 2019, despite a sharp 8.9% rebound in June.

Analysts consulted by the Central Bank’s weekly Focus survey expect gross domestic product to contract by 5.66% this year, a forecast that is less pessimistic than a month ago, when it was 6.5%. – Rappler.com

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