Employment ‘carnage’ of 200,000 jobs lost in January looks temporary, economists say
Riddled by Omicron’s rapid spread, the Canadian economy lost 200,100 jobs in January amid stricter public health rules put in place to slow the COVID-19 variant, but most signs point to a quick recovery.
The decrease marked the largest drop in a year — the economy shed 207,800 jobs in January 2021 — and the first falter in a run of job gains since May, Statistics Canada said Friday.
The job losses also pushed the unemployment rate to 6.5 per cent last month compared with 6.0 per cent in December, rising for the first time since April due “entirely” to those temporarily laid off or scheduled to start a job soon — the number of Canadians looking for work hardly budged — the agency added.
As Omicron propagated across the country, governments reimposed capacity limits and closures on workplaces such as restaurants, retail outlets, gyms and theatres. The vast majority of job cuts were in Ontario and Quebec, where some of the the strictest measures of any province came down.


