Source - http://www.reuters.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Attractions In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
By - Press Release
Category - Attractions In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
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Attractions In New Orleans |
Spain's
unemployment rate unexpectedly fell for the first time in two years in
the second quarter, adding weight to the government's contention that
the worst of the country's economic slump may be over.
A strong tourist season helped
the unemployment rate dip to 26.3 percent from 27.2 percent in the first
quarter, the National Statistics Institute said on Thursday,
That left 5.98 million people out of work - a far greater proportion of the population that every other euro zone country bar Greece - but the drop was the first since the same period of 2011.
"Almost
all the improvement we've seen today, in terms of the number of people
working and the unemployment rate, is due to seasonal factors," Angel
Laborda, economist at think tank Funcas, said.
Tourism
accounts for around 10 percent of Spanish gross domestic product and is
expected to be strong this year as cash-strapped Europeans look for
budget vacations away from Egypt and other Middle Eastern troublespots.
"Having
said that, even seasonally adjusted data is better than we expected
which is in line with the economic improvements forecast by the Bank of Spain earlier in the week," Laborda added.
The
central bank said on Tuesday the economy shrank just 0.1 percent
quarter on quarter between April and June, offering some support to a
government that has talked up prospects of an exit from recession as
soon as the current quarter.
But many economists believe the country's two-year slump, the second in three years, is unlikely to come to an end this year
A
major factor behind that more pessimistic view is an unemployment rate
that has surged since a property bubble burst in 2008, with some 3.8
million people joining the jobless lines since the first quarter of that
year.
STRUCTURAL WEAKNESS
Thursday's drop in unemployment was unexpected by economists polled by Reuters, who forecast a slight rise.
But the improved figure masks a deep structural problem - that of long-term unemployment.
Around
half of the near six million out of work in Spain have not held a job
for more than a year, while the number of homes with no one in work
stood at 1.8 million, the data showed.
After
a decade of above average economic growth, the prolonged recession
prompted hundreds of thousands to leave the country in the 2012,
including immigrants returning home and Spaniards in search of work
elsewhere.
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