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Spain's jobless rate soars to 17% | Spain's jobless rate soars to 17% |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Spain's unemployment rate hit 17.4% at the end of March, figures have shown, with the jobless total now having doubled over the past 12 months. | Spain's unemployment rate hit 17.4% at the end of March, figures have shown, with the jobless total now having doubled over the past 12 months. |
In the past year, two million people have lost their jobs taking the total out of work to just over four million. | In the past year, two million people have lost their jobs taking the total out of work to just over four million. |
The Bank of Spain recently predicted the jobless rate would reach 19.4% in 2010, as the recession took hold. | The Bank of Spain recently predicted the jobless rate would reach 19.4% in 2010, as the recession took hold. |
"It is a terrible figure," Octavio Granado, secretary of state for social security told state television. | "It is a terrible figure," Octavio Granado, secretary of state for social security told state television. |
He said the first quarter of any year was traditionally bad for employment in Spain. | He said the first quarter of any year was traditionally bad for employment in Spain. |
Mr Granado also said that 2009 was expected to be the worst part of the economic downturn. | Mr Granado also said that 2009 was expected to be the worst part of the economic downturn. |
"So we are in the epicentre of the crisis. We are in the eye of the perfect storm," he said. | |
The National Statistics Institute said Spain's jobless rate at the end of the first quarter was up 3.45 percentage points from the end of 2008. | The National Statistics Institute said Spain's jobless rate at the end of the first quarter was up 3.45 percentage points from the end of 2008. |
The BBC's Steve Kingstone in Madrid says the country has become used to grim unemployment data, but Friday's figures are especially shocking. | |
Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero will hope that the government's 70bn-euro ($92bn; £63bn) stimulus package will now create new jobs - above all in public works projects due to begin this month, our correspondent says. | |
But critics say deeper reforms of the labour market are needed - to eliminate red tape, and reduce the costs of hiring and firing permanent staff, he adds. | |
Under the current rules, many employers prefer to offer temporary contracts to staff who are then let go at the first sign of trouble. |
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