Economy

Brazil's Creation of New Jobs Slows Along With Its Economy.

Economy created 58,836 jobs in May, lowest for the month since 1992.

The Wall Street Journal
25/06/2014 15:15
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Brazil's creation of new jobs slowed in May amid sluggish economic performance.

 

Brazil's economy created 58,836 jobs in May, the country's labor ministry said Tuesday, the lowest figure for May since 1992. Some analysts had forecast a number almost 50% higher.

 

"The economy is very slow. Some sectors are actually eliminating jobs," said Flávio Castelo Branco, an economist at manufacturing trade group Conselho Nacional da Indústria in Brasília.

 

Brazil's unemployment rate has been hovering near record lows, and is measured anywhere between 5% and 7%, depending on the index. Economic growth for this year is forecast at a meager 1.2%, down sharply from 7.25% in 2010.

 

The millions of new jobs created by the Brazilian economy in recent years will have a positive effect on education and training in the future, Mr. Blanco said. Higher household incomes mean more families can afford to keep more members in school.

 

"The number of people entering the workforce has declined," Mr. Branco said, adding that those who wait to work will have more skills when they finally do get a job.

 

The low level of unemployment is also helping boost salaries in labor-intensive sectors. That is one reason why inflation isn't slowing down even though the central bank has increased borrowing costs and the economy has slumped.

 

The 12-month IPCA consumer-price index was at 6.4% in May and is forecast to remain at around that level for the rest of the year. The central bank's inflation target is 4.5%, with a tolerance range of two percentage points in either direction.

 

Service prices in Brazil rose 8.2% in February from a year earlier, according to the latest central bank report on inflation. The millions of Brazilians who have gotten jobs and joined the country's middle class are boosting demand for hair salons, restaurants and other services and are adding to salary pressures even as skill levels remain low.

 

Finance Minister Guido Mantega has said that increasing productivity is one of Brazil's main challenges. The government has created school programs to train more technical workers and is increasing the amount of funding funneled to education.

 

But the initiatives are relatively new and their results aren't likely to be felt in the short term, economists say. Some relief for employers could come from recent reductions in payroll taxes.

 

"We hope that the [tax] measures will help job creation," Labor Minister Manuel Dias told reporters as he commented May payroll figures. "We didn't stop hiring and we want to continue."

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