The unemployment rate in advanced countries edged up to 8.0 percent in July from 7.9 percent in June, with young people in the front line of the jobless queues, the OECD said on Tuesday. This meant that in the OECD area, 47.9 million people were ranked as unemployed, an increase of 13.1 million from the onset of the financial crises in July 2008, the OECD said.
Of these unemployed people, 11.9 million were classed as youths. But data for August showed the rate in the United States falling by 0.2 points to 8.1 percent and in Canada it was stable at 7.3 percent. In the eurozone, the rate was steady at 11.3 percent in July. This followed 13 months in a row of a rising rate and meant that the ratio of unemployed to the workforce was 4.0 percentage points above a record low rate in March 2008. The highest level was 25.1 percent in Spain, an increase of 0.2 percent from the June level, followed by a steady rate of 15.7 percent in Portugal, and 14.9 percent in Ireland where it had edged up 0.1 points. But the rates in Australia, Austria, Germany, Japan, South Korea and Luxembourg, Mexico and the Netherlands, were less than 5.5 percent.