The number of people registering as unemployed in Spain fell 2.77% in April to 3.02 million people, the lowest level since July 2019, as hirings increased and took the number of permanent job contracts to over 20 million for the first time ever, official data showed on Wednesday.
Most sectors increased employment in April, and a strong recovery of the pandemic-devastated tourism industry during Easter also helped to improve the labour market data, the Labour Ministry said.
‘Unemployment data is better than when we came to power despite the great uncertainty,’ Labour Minister Yolanda Díaz told an event hosted by Europa Press in Madrid. Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and his cabinet were sworn in in January 2020.
A key change in the Spanish labour market is also the job contracts signed. Now, nearly one in two contracts (48.2% in April) are permanent contracts, which is the result of the labour market reform approved by the government in December 2021, and finally passed in early February. Before, only one in ten contracts were permanent. Also read: Spanish government secures landmark labour reform, thanks to voting error.
Díaz described the data as ‘spectacular’. She said that thanks to the labour reform now ‘one in two contracts is indefinite’, adding that ‘it is no small thing to change the paradigm of a country’s labour market’.
In total, 1,450,093 employment contracts were signed in April, of which 698,646 are permanent. By sector, 50% of the contracts signed in the agricultural and services sectors are permanent. In the construction sector, the percentage is 74%. Among those aged under 25 years, 44% of the contracts signed in April were also permanent.
In December 2021, prior to the labour market reform, permanent contracts accounted for just 10% of the total. This rose to 15% in January, 22% in February, 31% in March and to 48% in April.
The overall data also marks the third consecutive month of falling unemployment figures and the lowest number of jobless in a month of April since 2008.
According to the latest unemployment figures registered by the State Public Employment Service (SEPE), in April the number fell by 86,260, which is 2.7% less than the previous month. The total number of people registered in the SEPE offices as job seekers stood at 3.02 million.
In a year-on-year comparison, unemployment has decreased in Spain by 888,125 people (-22.71%) since April 2021, when Covid-19 was still hitting the Spanish economy hard.
Spain’s quarterly unemployment rate, which last year fell to pre-2008 financial crisis levels, edged up in the first quarter of this year to 13.65% but remains far below year-ago levels, the country’s statistics department said last week.
En abril registramos 698.646 contratos indefinidos, la cifra más alta registrada en nuestro país hasta la fecha. 1 de cada 2 contratos firmados en este mes ha sido indefinido.
— Yolanda Díaz (@Yolanda_Diaz_) May 4, 2022
Datos sin precedentes que reflejan que la reforma laboral ya está transformando la contratación. pic.twitter.com/WT3IEB6FfP
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1 comment
Garbage. It’s public employment. Jobs in the private sector keep dwindling.