News

Latvia’s jobless rate is EU’s highest

December 02, 2009

Unemployment in Latvia, where one in five workers is without a job, is the highest in the European Union, according to a new report from Eurostat.

The Luxembourg-based statistics agency reported Dec. 1 that seasonally adjusted unemployment in Latvia reached 20.9 percent in October, topping even Spain, where the rate was 19.3 percent. A year earlier, Latvia’s unemployment stood at 9.1 percent.

Average unemployment across the 27 countries that are members of the European Union reached 9.3 percent in October 2009, up from 7.3 percent in October 2008. The lowest unemployment rates, according to Eurostat, were recorded in the Netherlands (3.7 percent) and Austria (4.7 percent).

The average jobless rate for youth—persons younger than 25—reached 20.7 percent in October across the EU, according to Eurostat. Spain recorded the highest youth unemployment, 42.9 percent, followed by Latvia, 33.6 percent. The lowest youth unemployment was in the Netherlands, 7.2 percent.

Regional data reported by Latvia’s State Employment Agency (Nodarbinātības valsts aģentūra, or NVA) show that the Rēzekne area remains the worst in terms of joblessness. The unemployment rate there reached 30.4 percent in October, NVA officials told a Saeima commission on Nov 17. The lowest unemployment rates were found in the Tukums region (10 percent) and the Ventspils region (10.8 percent).

However, Director Baiba Paševica also noted that unemployment in Kurzeme has grown markedly, a trend usually characteristic of Latgale, according to a NVA press release. The Kuldīga region, for example, recorded unemployment of 21.2 percent in October. By contrast, Latgale’s largest city, Daugavpils, had one of the lowest unemployment rates, 11.7 percent.

NVA officials also noted that the ranks of the unemployed include more women (52 percent) than men (48 percent). That is explained in part by the fact that layoffs have been most prevalent in sectors that traditionally employ more women, such as government, education, medicine and social work.

Andris Straumanis is editor of Latvians Online.

Article tools

Printer-friendly format

Ieteikt draugiem.lv Share on Facebook

Comments

Viesturs Silinskis

Andri, not wishing to sound facetious... but it is common knowledge, rather than news, that Latvia’s jobless rate is the highest in the EU!

05 Dec 2009 (Great Britain (UK))

janis jansons

Why is it the highest? And is there a solution.

05 Dec 2009 (Australia)

Juris (George) Dale

What are the Latvian politicians, besides fighting each other, doing about this problem. No wonder that so many people, like myself, born in Riga, cannot return to our native land.

28 Dec 2009 (United States)

Post a comment

Comments are limited to 2,500 characters. Don't post foul language, libelous statements, commercial messages or material copyrighted by others. Comments are moderated and are posted after review. Those deemed inappropriate or off-topic will be deleted without notification. For more information, contact us.

Vote

What's new

Reviews

11 Feb 2012

Despite 25 years of making music, Bumerangs has just two albums

Bumerangs, from the northern Latvian city of Valka, has long been a Latvian schlager music institution. Celebrating its 25th anniversary in December 2011, the band has been one of the hardest working—playing, in some years, hundreds of concerts, and entertaining audiences not just in Latvia, but elsewhere in the world.

Multimedia

09 Feb 2012

Ar videoklipu biedrība mudina latviešus celties un iet balsot valodas referendumā

Biedrība “Par latviešu valodu” 9. februārī Rīgā atklāja akciju mudināt latviešus piedalīties 18. februāra referendumā un balsot pret grozījumiem Latvijas satversmē, kas noteiktu krievu valodu kā otro valsts valodu. Akcija ieskaita televīzijas reklāmas videoklipu ar nosaukumu “Celies un ej”, kurā dažādi sabiedrībā pazīstami cilvēki aicina skatītāju piedalīties referendumā.

News

08 Feb 2012

For upcoming language referendum, absentee ballot applications top 1,200

The hot-button language referendum scheduled Feb. 18 apparently has lots of voters abroad interested in letting their voice be heard, if figures from absentee ballot requests are any indication.

In the forums

Help with Latvian newspaper translation posted by shellym on 11 Feb 2012

The Arts Diplomacy Festival 2012 posted by ICD Academy on 09 Feb 2012

A place to see before dying... posted by anita on 07 Feb 2012

Who to trust Kremlin or Russia Greenpeace? Fire at Nuclear research institute! posted by Talisman Browns on 05 Feb 2012

«Karš bez noteikumiem» posted by Peteris Cedrins on 02 Feb 2012

Listen to radio
Festivals

Advertise with Latvians Online! Click here