The news of recession and job losses is all over the world and there would be very few countries not affected by one of the worst unemployment rates ever seen by the Generation Xers and the Millennials. The global economy is intertwined and a large shake-up at one end of the globe transfers the impact throughout the world.
Here is a compilation of news from around the world on what is happening from Asia to Europe and the Americas as the world rides the recession and severe job cuts wave.
United States
US indeed triggered the world economic downturn but being the largest economy as it is this was very much predicted and expected.
According to an article in Yahoo News:
The Federal Reserve expects the unemployment rate will probably "rise more steeply into early next year before flattening out at a high level over the rest of the year," according to minutes from the central bank's March meeting released this month. Many private economists expect the rate to hit 10 per cent by year's end.
Finding a new job is increasingly difficult for those who have been laid off. Typically, hiring doesn't pick up until well after an economic recovery is under way.
Canada (Source: Stockhouse )
Statistics Canada reported Thursday that Canada lost another 61,300 jobs in March 2009, taking the unemployment rate up three-tenths of a point to eight per cent for the first time in seven years.
Since the peak in October, employment has fallen each month for a total of 357,000 jobs lost, representing 2.1 per cent of the workforce. That's a pace of contraction greater than at any time during the 1991 recession and equaling that of the more severe 1982 slump.
Russia
Sky News reports:
But the economy - once one of the fastest growing in the world - is now hurtling into recession.
The problems the country faces are enormous, partly because it failed to diversify in the boom times.
Its dependence on receipts from the export of oil and gas has given rise to a hugely unbalanced economy.
According to Javno:
Officials had been saying that the worst of the crisis may be over for Russia, taking heart from higher global oil prices, a stabilisation of the rouble and a recovery in domestic stocks.
But with retail sales, real wages and capital investment all falling sharper than expected in March, the data suggests that Russia's first economic contraction in a decade is still very much in full swing. "We see this data as an indication that ... the decline is starting to spread to consumer demand and it will continue to pressure the economy over the next several quarters at least," said Vladimir Osakovsky, analyst at Unicredit.
There are numerous multinational companies in India and the layoffs in the large organizations affect all such countries. The layoffs are worldwide and every nation feels the reverberations of a large shakeup anywhere in the world.
(Source: The National )
Unlike in the West, there is no system of social security, or unemployment insurance, in India, and most workers who are laid off are on their own.
China (Source: CNN.com )
Migrant workers arrive at Beijing's West Railway Station on Monday, despite growing unemployment.
Quoting a senior official and a survey by the Ministry of Agriculture, Xinhua said about 15.3 percent of the 130 million workers who migrated to metropolitan areas in years past have returned to the countryside.
China Daily reports on the path of recovery for China:
Bob Hawke, former prime minister of Australia, forecast China's GDP growth between 7 percent to 8 percent. In the meantime, he believed a reversal had come.
"The four-trillion-yuan stimulus (package) is now beginning to work, and China's economy ... has reached the bottom and started to come up now," Hawke told Xinhua at the forum.
Increasing stress of sluggish exports, dampened employment and shrinking corporate profits have pulled down the Chinese economy to a growth of 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter last year.
Japan
Companies big and small are expecting losses or drastically dwindling profits. Thousands of job cuts have been announced in recent weeks.
Many Japanese companies are adopting "work-sharing" to ride out the global slump.
Europe
According to a report in May 2009, the European Union admitted that its previous forecasts were way off the mark. It now predicts "A deep and widespread recession" across the continent and says unemployment among nations using the euro currency will rise to a postwar record of 11.5 percent in 2010. The new forecasts expect the economies of the 27-nation EU and the 16-nation euro zone to shrink by 4 percent this year - more than double the January estimate.
The European Commission said more than 26 million people in the EU will be out of work next year as a contracting economy sheds an extra 8.5 million jobs.
According to The Guardian
In Switzerland the country's biggest bank, UBS, is reportedly planning to axe up to 10,000 more jobs as early as next week (April 2009) as it struggles to regain profitability – and credibility.
United Kingdom
(Source: SKY News )
The number of unemployed people also rose significantly in Leeds, Glasgow, Sheffield, Hull, Manchester, Bradford, Kirklees, Liverpool and Bristol.
Germany
The New York Times reports of large unemployment surges in Germany.
The German automaker Daimler, which has placed some 70,000 workers on short-hour status, said recently that it could no longer rule out job cuts.
Spain had some interesting headlines in relation to layoffs and recession "Pain in Spain" and "The Fiesta is over in recession-stricken Spain"
MSN MoneyCentral reports :
Now, two years after the real estate bubble burst, the province is one of the gushing wounds in Spain's recession-plagued economy.
Almeria's unemployment rate of 25 percent is one of Spain's highest, and makes the nationwide figure of 13.9 percent — already the highest in the European Union — seem mild.As the global meltdown worsens, it offers a glimpse of where Spain may be heading. The government says unemployment nationally will reach 16 percent this year, and some forecasters say it may approach 20 percent.
The Herald of Zimbabwe reports:
Many countries are experiencing reduced trade and economic activity, withdrawal of investors and an acute scarcity of credit. Projects are being postponed or cancelled altogether. Financial inflows are dropping, including levels of international assistance and remittances.
The result is that the ability of African countries to support basic services, tackle their developmental challenges and achieve the Millennium Development Goals is being heavily impaired. The human, social and political consequences could be enormous.
Africa now needs urgent support to maintain economic activity and protect the vulnerable from the crisis. But while trillions of dollars are being found, at short notice, for stimulus plans and bail outs in the richer countries, the least developed countries find themselves lacking access to credit and faced with lending policies and practices that minimise their chances of receiving loans.
The evidence is that Africa is hit twice. Not only are poorer countries going to be most affected by the global crisis, but the very way in which the developed world has responded to the crisis continues to worsen their situation by encouraging capital to flee to perceived safety. Lacking the means to argue their case at the top tables in the global economic and financial architecture, Africa's countries are left to face the very real danger of malignant decoupling, derailment and abandonment.
Much better placed than other countries, it was made official in April 2009, that the Australian economy is in recession.
According to BBC report:
This decline - revealed last month - was the first time the economy had seen a quarterly contraction in eight years.
If data shows the economy shrank between January and March, then Australia will be in recession according to the usual definition of two consecutive quarters of falling output.
The Australian economy is now likely to be in recession, the head of the country's central bank has admitted.
Despite the warning, he insisted that Australia was well placed to weather the global recession, thanks to its close proximity and trading ties to "dynamic" Asian markets, specifically China.
"Australia's genuine long-term economic prospects remain good," he said.
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5 comments:
You are so resourceful. This compilation is so much an information to read...very informative and true.
I appreciate the international stats and not sugar coating the situation like so many people do about this. As a counselor , I am seeing a lot more depression due to unemployment issues.
Dee
Great post. The numbers are hard to look at, but people need to stay positive and face things head on.
Appreciate your comments Sharon, Dee..
you are very right about keeping the positive side strong in these trying times, also keeping the faith and trying smarter ways of job search are the keys to find the right path in the best possible way.
Nice article, thanks for the updates. The situation in Canada is very bad indeed, I never thought I would see the unemployment rate so high. I hope we'll get out of this one soon. Thanks again,
take care, Elli
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