Looking at the headlines today I see Canada lost 71000 jobs in November, after losing only 1800 in October, pushing the unemployment rate fron 5.5% to 5.9% compared to the U.S. which added 266000 thousand jobs with an unemployment rate of 3.5%. Now I don't get too excited about month to month variations but after reading various articles on yesterday's throne speach it could be the start of a trend imo. Trudeau's main concern is climate change, it would appear that he believes his path back to a majority is through policies related to climate change. I can certainly appreciate that he believes there is little room for him to add seats in the west and he is probably right but this month's job report showed the biggest job losses in Quebec, in his favoured backyard, should give him something else to think about. Enjoy your day.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Jobs, Canada down, U.S. Up
Collapse
Logging in...
Welcome to Agriville! You need to login to post messages in the Agriville chat forums. Please login below.
X
-
Let's all encourage trudeau to continue down the path of destruction he is on. It only adds fuel to the separatism fire. At this rate, even Chuck will be a hard core separatist soon.
-
I have a question.....I have been cutting ice for a month ....its 8 inches thick on the dugout....
So if we have ice that thick wouldn't it be building in the arctic now or are temperatures still above zero up there?
And didn't AL gore say we would be using the northern ports regularly by now?...
Last boat out of churchill was November 7....
Comment
-
Originally posted by bucket View PostI have a question.....I have been cutting ice for a month ....its 8 inches thick on the dugout....
So if we have ice that thick wouldn't it be building in the arctic now or are temperatures still above zero up there?
And didn't AL gore say we would be using the northern ports regularly by now?...
Last boat out of churchill was November 7....
Comment
-
Astonishing U.S. job creation of 266,000 jobs in November well above average trader estimates going into Friday’s report was apparently aided by 41,000 GM workers returning to work. These are not fresh, new manufacturing jobs. Recent U.S. manufacturing data has shown a slowdown stateside.
Also, interesting data showing U.S. labour force participation rate actually declined to 62.4%.
But as soon as robust (on-the-surface) data was released, algorithms took over . . . triggering a powerful buying wave. We may be in for some heavy volatility straight ahead, as human logic gradually kicks in.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Hamloc View PostLooking at the headlines today I see Canada lost 71000 jobs in November, after losing only 1800 in October, pushing the unemployment rate fron 5.5% to 5.9% compared to the U.S. which added 266000 thousand jobs with an unemployment rate of 3.5%. Now I don't get too excited about month to month variations but after reading various articles on yesterday's throne speach it could be the start of a trend imo. Trudeau's main concern is climate change, it would appear that he believes his path back to a majority is through policies related to climate change. I can certainly appreciate that he believes there is little room for him to add seats in the west and he is probably right but this month's job report showed the biggest job losses in Quebec, in his favoured backyard, should give him something else to think about. Enjoy your day.
Comment
-
Originally posted by dmlfarmer View Post18,000 (25% of Nov losses) were lost in Alberta in November on Kenney's watch.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Hamloc View PostMy personal opinion Dml is that many companies hoped that the Conservatives would win the election. When that didn't happen I think companies abruptly changed course. I believe that it really doesn't matter what Kenney does the energy jobs aren't coming back. Oil is produced with more automation, less employees today. The immediate future for Alberta isn't that bright imo.
Those jobs aren't coming back, no matter the price of oil. Technology and progress have deemed them obsolete. The low price of oil just makes that process of becoming more efficient go that much faster. All of those celebrating the end of the oil industry because of low prices, fail to notice that it isn't demand that dropped off, it was a victim of its own success.
There were a number of projects on hold waiting for the outcome of the election, which were then postponed indefinitely, or scrapped altogether, along with the staff. Who would invest in an industry that is unapologetically under attack by the government?
Edit: Link to the oil production chart since it is hard to read.
https://economicdashboard.alberta.ca/OilProduction https://economicdashboard.alberta.ca/OilProductionLast edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Dec 8, 2019, 23:32.
Comment
-
Originally posted by dmlfarmer View Post18,000 (25% of Nov losses) were lost in Alberta in November on Kenney's watch.
But much like the ag sector which once had a lot more people, the commodity is more important than the number of people involved in its production.
Comment
-
Matching supply to the markets ability to move it to the customer is a good business decision. Over production is not. Uncontrolled booms lead to inflation with higher production costs and over supply that come back to bite. Peter Lougheed would have supported slower growth and better planning. And putting away a significant amount of revenue for the eventual bust.
Comment
- Reply to this Thread
- Return to Topic List
Comment