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Alberta unemployment hits 9%, highest in 22 years

WATCH ABOVE: Alberta's unemployment rate has hit its highest level in 22 years. And Calgary is leading the way with a jobless rate at a staggering 10.3%. Here's Jayme Doll with the numbers, but also how some are starting to find a silver lining – Dec 2, 2016

More Alberta jobs were lost and more Albertans were looking for work in November, pushing the unemployment rate to the highest it has been in over 22 years.

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Statistics Canada said, in Alberta, employment fell by 13,000 in November. At the same time, the number of job-seekers increased by over 11,000, pushing the unemployment rate up 0.5 percentage points to 9 per cent — the highest rate since July 1994.

READ MORE: Calgary maintains highest unemployment rate in Canada for 5th straight month

Compared with November 2015, employment in the province was down 30,000 (-1.3 per cent) and unemployment increased by 52,000 (+30.6 per cent).

The downturn in Alberta’s energy sector has led to thousands of layoffs, as the over two-year-long global oil price slump has made many oil and gas operations unprofitable.

The number show while the unemployment rate in Edmonton has dropped in the past three months (from 8 per cent in August to 6.8 per cent in November), more and more people in Calgary are losing their jobs.

Calgary’s unemployment rate was 10.3 per cent last month, marking the fifth straight month the oil and gas hub’s rate was the highest in Canada.

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READ MORE: Here’s why oil prices, the Canadian dollar and stock markets are all up

Edmonton’s unemployment rate dropped slightly from 6.9 per cent in October to 6.8 per cent in November.

The city’s chief economist said employment in construction, manufacturing and energy were essentially unchanged in November, which he believes suggests that employment in these sectors has stabilized.

As we move into 2017, John Rose predicts employment will modestly improve, particularly in areas such as manufacturing and energy.

The unemployment rate in Alberta was higher than the national average.

The Canadian labour market unexpectedly added 10,700 net jobs last month and the unemployment rate slid to 6.8 per cent — but the latest numbers raise questions about the quality of the work.

Statistics Canada’s November employment survey shows yet another monthly decline in the more-desirable category of full-time work — a figure more than offset by a gain in part-time jobs.

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READ MORE: Canada’s unemployment rate dips to 6.8% as 10,700 mostly part-time jobs added

The report says the market added 19,400 part-time jobs last month and shed 8,700 full-time positions.

Across the country, more people were employed in the finance, insurance, real estate and leasing industries, in information, culture and recreation, in the “other services” industry and in agriculture.

On the other hand, Statistics Canada said there were declines in construction, in manufacturing, as well as in transportation and warehousing.

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