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大家说说最近听说哪些公司在裁?
我只听说一个MANUFACTURING的公司和ALCATEL在裁人.
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen...fcb32-2ef2-4fc7-8b28-aa8475f2cb4c&k=68071&p=1
As more look for work, November unemployment inches up to 6.3 per cent
John Ward, Canadian Press
Published: Saturday, December 02, 2006
OTTAWA (CP) - More people went looking for work in November and helped push the unemployment rate up a tenth of a percentage point to 6.3 per cent despite the creation of 22,000 new part-time jobs.
The additional jobs were mainly in the goods-producing sector, which was seen as good news. The better-than-forecast job creation had some economists predicting a rosier fourth quarter than many had previously expected, especially given lacklustre third-quarter GDP numbers reported Thursday.
"I think people were getting worried about the fact that we might see that kind of deceleration extend into the fourth quarter," said Carolyn Kwan, senior financial markets economist at Scotiabank.
"But really, with today's job numbers it really, I think, confirms that fact that we will get some kind of good rebound in the fourth quarter, given that we had 50,000 jobs created in October as well as another 22,000 in November."
Dawn Desjardins, senior economist with Royal Bank, said the November numbers suggest job creation this year will be the strongest since 2002.
"With the steady creation of full-time jobs and wage gains after taking account for inflation, labour market conditions will continue to support consumer spending in the fourth quarter," she added.
Sal Gautieri of the Bank of Montreal said the increase in the number of job-seekers bodes well.
"The jump in the workforce suggests that the tightness in labour markets is attracting new workers, which has positive implications for Canada's inflation outlook," he said.
Statistics Canada says the economy has created 89,000 jobs since August.
Alberta continued its boom last month, adding 10,000 new jobs. However, the provincial unemployment rate rose 0.1 of a percentage point to 3.1 per cent as more people were job hunting.
So far this year, Alberta has created 112,000 jobs. That's a 6.2 per cent increase, three times the national growth rate.
The statistics agency said Alberta accounted for 40 per cent of the national job growth this year.
In Nova Scotia, unemployment fell almost a full point to 7.4 per cent, a 30-year low.
Ontario produced 19,000 new jobs last month, but unemployment was unchanged at 6.4 per cent. Quebec lost jobs and saw unemployment inch up to 8.0 per cent from 7.7 per cent.
The Ontario numbers were welcomed by analysts, although they pointed out that Central Canada has been hit by job losses in manufacturing. Ontario alone has lost 63,000 factory jobs so far this year.
"You still have the idea that the strong dollar and U.S. weakness is wearing on our manufactures," said Andrew Gretzinger, senior economic analyst at MFC Global Investment Management in Toronto. "Employment growth there has lagged the national average."
Gautieri had a different read on the Ontario data, saying the November upturn in manufacturing jobs "suggests, albeit tentatively, that the drag on the export sector from the strong Canadian dollar might be waning."
Economists say the Bank of Canada is likely to hold steady on interest rates in light of the job numbers, even though inflation remains a concern. The bank issues its next monetary policy decision on Tuesday.
"We will be seeing policy staying on hold, neutral at the current rates," said Kwan of Scotiabank.
"I don't think there's any desire on the bank's part to be raising rates, even though we have inflation numbers a little higher than they'd like to see them."
The consensus among economists is that the bank will stay the course into next year, then start lowering rates.
-
OTTAWA (CP) - The national unemployment rate was 6.3 per cent in November. Statistics Canada also released seasonally adjusted, three-month moving average unemployment rates for major cities but cautions the figures may fluctuate widely because they are based on small statistical samples. (Previous month in brackets.)
-St. John's, N.L. 7.7 (8.0)
-Halifax 4.9 (5.2)
-Saint John, N.B. 5.9 (6.1)
-Saguenay, Que. 8.6 (8.8)
-Quebec 6.1 (5.7)
-Trois-Rivieres, Que. 7.2 (8.0)
-Sherbrooke, Que. 7.9 (8.1)
-Montreal 7.9 (8.0)
-Gatineau, Que. 5.6 (4.9)
-Ottawa 5.6 (5.2)
-Kingston, Ont. 5.1 (5.7)
-Toronto 6.9 (6.7)
-Hamilton 6.4 (6.5)
-Kitchener, Ont. 5.3 (5.3)
-London, Ont. 6.3 (6.7)
-Oshawa, Ont. 6.9 (6.8)
-St. Catharines-Niagara, Ont. 6.7 (6.6)
-Sudbury, Ont. 6.7 (7.7)
-Thunder Bay, Ont. 7.2 (7.8)
-Windsor, Ont. 8.7 (8.8)
-Winnipeg 4.5 (4.3)
-Regina 4.7 (4.8)
-Saskatoon 3.1 (3.7)
-Calgary 2.8 (3.2)
-Edmonton 3.8 (4.1)
-Abbotsford, B.C. 4.0 (4.2)
-Vancouver 4.3 (4.1)
-Victoria 3.8 (4.0)
我只听说一个MANUFACTURING的公司和ALCATEL在裁人.
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen...fcb32-2ef2-4fc7-8b28-aa8475f2cb4c&k=68071&p=1
As more look for work, November unemployment inches up to 6.3 per cent
John Ward, Canadian Press
Published: Saturday, December 02, 2006
OTTAWA (CP) - More people went looking for work in November and helped push the unemployment rate up a tenth of a percentage point to 6.3 per cent despite the creation of 22,000 new part-time jobs.
The additional jobs were mainly in the goods-producing sector, which was seen as good news. The better-than-forecast job creation had some economists predicting a rosier fourth quarter than many had previously expected, especially given lacklustre third-quarter GDP numbers reported Thursday.
"I think people were getting worried about the fact that we might see that kind of deceleration extend into the fourth quarter," said Carolyn Kwan, senior financial markets economist at Scotiabank.
"But really, with today's job numbers it really, I think, confirms that fact that we will get some kind of good rebound in the fourth quarter, given that we had 50,000 jobs created in October as well as another 22,000 in November."
Dawn Desjardins, senior economist with Royal Bank, said the November numbers suggest job creation this year will be the strongest since 2002.
"With the steady creation of full-time jobs and wage gains after taking account for inflation, labour market conditions will continue to support consumer spending in the fourth quarter," she added.
Sal Gautieri of the Bank of Montreal said the increase in the number of job-seekers bodes well.
"The jump in the workforce suggests that the tightness in labour markets is attracting new workers, which has positive implications for Canada's inflation outlook," he said.
Statistics Canada says the economy has created 89,000 jobs since August.
Alberta continued its boom last month, adding 10,000 new jobs. However, the provincial unemployment rate rose 0.1 of a percentage point to 3.1 per cent as more people were job hunting.
So far this year, Alberta has created 112,000 jobs. That's a 6.2 per cent increase, three times the national growth rate.
The statistics agency said Alberta accounted for 40 per cent of the national job growth this year.
In Nova Scotia, unemployment fell almost a full point to 7.4 per cent, a 30-year low.
Ontario produced 19,000 new jobs last month, but unemployment was unchanged at 6.4 per cent. Quebec lost jobs and saw unemployment inch up to 8.0 per cent from 7.7 per cent.
The Ontario numbers were welcomed by analysts, although they pointed out that Central Canada has been hit by job losses in manufacturing. Ontario alone has lost 63,000 factory jobs so far this year.
"You still have the idea that the strong dollar and U.S. weakness is wearing on our manufactures," said Andrew Gretzinger, senior economic analyst at MFC Global Investment Management in Toronto. "Employment growth there has lagged the national average."
Gautieri had a different read on the Ontario data, saying the November upturn in manufacturing jobs "suggests, albeit tentatively, that the drag on the export sector from the strong Canadian dollar might be waning."
Economists say the Bank of Canada is likely to hold steady on interest rates in light of the job numbers, even though inflation remains a concern. The bank issues its next monetary policy decision on Tuesday.
"We will be seeing policy staying on hold, neutral at the current rates," said Kwan of Scotiabank.
"I don't think there's any desire on the bank's part to be raising rates, even though we have inflation numbers a little higher than they'd like to see them."
The consensus among economists is that the bank will stay the course into next year, then start lowering rates.
-
OTTAWA (CP) - The national unemployment rate was 6.3 per cent in November. Statistics Canada also released seasonally adjusted, three-month moving average unemployment rates for major cities but cautions the figures may fluctuate widely because they are based on small statistical samples. (Previous month in brackets.)
-St. John's, N.L. 7.7 (8.0)
-Halifax 4.9 (5.2)
-Saint John, N.B. 5.9 (6.1)
-Saguenay, Que. 8.6 (8.8)
-Quebec 6.1 (5.7)
-Trois-Rivieres, Que. 7.2 (8.0)
-Sherbrooke, Que. 7.9 (8.1)
-Montreal 7.9 (8.0)
-Gatineau, Que. 5.6 (4.9)
-Ottawa 5.6 (5.2)
-Kingston, Ont. 5.1 (5.7)
-Toronto 6.9 (6.7)
-Hamilton 6.4 (6.5)
-Kitchener, Ont. 5.3 (5.3)
-London, Ont. 6.3 (6.7)
-Oshawa, Ont. 6.9 (6.8)
-St. Catharines-Niagara, Ont. 6.7 (6.6)
-Sudbury, Ont. 6.7 (7.7)
-Thunder Bay, Ont. 7.2 (7.8)
-Windsor, Ont. 8.7 (8.8)
-Winnipeg 4.5 (4.3)
-Regina 4.7 (4.8)
-Saskatoon 3.1 (3.7)
-Calgary 2.8 (3.2)
-Edmonton 3.8 (4.1)
-Abbotsford, B.C. 4.0 (4.2)
-Vancouver 4.3 (4.1)
-Victoria 3.8 (4.0)