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Sasko Lazarov//Photocall Ireland
crisis

Unemployment down in eurozone but 18 million still jobless

Greece is still the country faring the worst with an unemployment rate of 26.7 per cent.

UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE eurozone eased, with the rate edging down to 11.8 percent in March, according to official data today, with small signs of improvement in Greece’s high jobless rate.

But the ravages of economic crisis on job prospects for young people were also highlighted, particularly in Greece and Spain.

About 18.91 million people remained unemployed in the 18-member eurozone in March, down 22,000 from the February level and 316,000 from the level a year earlier, the Eurostat statistics agency said.

Eurozone economies are struggling at different speeds into growth and away from the crisis downturn but the effect on unemployment, at near record high levels in some countries, is lagging behind and is likely to continue doing so, economists have warned.

Our own rate of unemployment fell to 11.7 per cent with just over 29,000 less people signing on in April.

The eurozone country faring the worst was Greece, with an unemployment rate of 26.7 percent of the workforce, although the recession-hit economy is clawing its way back from the 27.2 percent rate of December, the month with the latest data available.

Austria has the lowest unemployment figure in the eurozone, with joblessness at 4.9 percent, followed by Germany’s 5.1 percent.

The rate in bailed-out eurozone members Ireland and Portugal remained stable, with Ireland’s March unemployment at 11.8 percent, down slightly from the previous month’s 11.9, while Portugal was unchanged at 15.2 percent.

Across the wider 28-member European Union, unemployment came in at 10.5 percent in March – almost no change from the previous month but comparing favourably to the 10.9 percent of March 2013.

Overall, the number of jobless across the EU dropped by 66,000 since February, with 929,000 more people employed today than at the same time in 2013.

Unemployment among young people as a result of the financial and then eurozone debt crises is a particular worry for governments which have spoken of a “lost generation”.

Eurostat showed that the March youth unemployment rate in the single currency bloc was at 23.7 percent, compared to the 24.0 percent levels of March 2013.

In March, there were more than 3.4 million unemployed people aged under 25 in the eurozone.

The countries with the highest youth unemployment levels were Greece (56.8 percent) and Spain (53.9 percent), with Germany and Austria faring the best, at 7.8 percent and 9.5 percent respectively.

- © AFP 2014.

Related: Unemployment rate falls again to 11.7 per cent>

Read: OECD says JobBridge is leaving most disadvantaged behind>

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