IHS Global: February German labour market report reveals ongoing unemployment decline, surging employment
Frankfurt/Main (1.3.16) – In Febuary, seasonally adjusted German unemployment declined by 11,000 month-on-month (m/m), reaching yet another record low since German re-unification in 1990. This broadly matches the average pace of decline during 2014-15. There had been an interim stagnation phase during May-September 2015, but the downward trend existing since mid-2009 has been resumed since. Indeed, during those six-and-a-half years, there have been two prior upward corrections that equally failed to turn the trend, one between April 2012 and November 2013 (by 87,000 overall) and, following a fresh drop by 72,000 between December 2013 and April 2014, one in May/June 2014 (by 26,000).
The latter had reflected temporarily stagnating GDP growth in combination with weather and holiday timing effects. Importantly, even during the more pronounced increase in unemployment during 2012-13 there had been a large concurrent increase in the labour force, rendering the very limited reaction of unemployment to the slowdown in GDP growth quite remarkable and also helping to explain why employment continued to increase steadily in this time. With respect to unemployment, the average monthly decline between mid-2009 and the initial trough in March 2012 had been -19,000, more than double the average pace of -7,000 observed during 2015. By contrast, employment has been increasing almost without interruption since late 2009, posting an average monthly increase of 34,000 during the past six years. This is almost four times the size of the average pace of unemployment declines in this period (-9,000), which demonstrates the robustness of the upward trend in the size of the labour force and therefore the extent of the underlying improvement in the labour market in recent years.
The adjusted level of joblessness was 2.723 million in February, representing yet another all-time low in unified Germany. This compares to a preceding cyclical trough of 3.18 million in November 2008 (end to economic boom of 2006-08) and the post-Lehman crisis peak of 3.49 million in mid-2009. The adjusted unemployment rate has held steady at 6.2%, the lowest level of the past 25 years. The unemployment rate had been fluctuating in a narrow band of 6.7-6.9% for three years starting in September 2011, but has been declining again since October 2014. The latest (extrapolated) Labour Agency figures about firms‘ cyclically induced usage of short-time work schemes are somewhat higher than before, but remain fairly benign as yet (the Agency also notes an increased statistical uncertainty). In December, the latest month for which such data is available, 49,000 employees were affected (not adjusted for seasonal variations), roughly as many as in November and 10,000 more than in December 2014. This level still represents only 3.4% of the peak of 1.44 million seen in May 2009. Furthermore, new applications for (cyclical) short-time work are estimated by the Agency at only 18,000 in January, following 22,000 in December, 20,000 in November, and a trough at around 12,000 in July/August 2015. Separately, the Agency states that the number of people benefiting from so-called active labour market policy measures (including that involving the activity of private firms) posted -2.4% y/y in February, following also -2.4% y/y in January and -4.7% y/y a quarter earlier in November. This means that the degree of government support and thus relief effect for registered unemployment retains a diminishing tendency at the data edge, but with less momentum than last autumn. Overall, recent unemployment declines remain largely market-driven.
Meanwhile, employment, data for which lags unemployment by one month, is steaming ahead. Following a phase with somewhat subdued momentum between mid-2014 and mid-2015, employment most recently increased by 74,000 m/m in seasonally adjusted terms to a level of 43.34 million in January. This is up markedly versus December’s increase of 50,000, let alone the 2015 average of 37,000 or the 2012-14 average of 28,000. The January increase even beats the pace of employment build-up observed during most of 2010-11, a time when German GDP grew at a clip of almost 4% and not less than 2% as at present. In cumulative terms, the latest level of employment is now 2.30 million higher than at the time of its previous cyclical peak of 41.04 million in February 2009, before the global crisis of 2007-08 exerted its (lagged) effect. By contrast, unemployment only declined by 0.57 million in this period. Note that during the recession in the first half of 2009, employment had already been falling by less than unemployment was increasing, as firms aimed to hold onto their existing workforce wherever possible at the time (utilizing short-time work schemes instead). In that phase, the labour force had thus been increasing but firms refrained from hiring. Since the economic recovery took hold from mid-2009 onwards, employment gains have persistently stayed well ahead of declines in unemployment, signalling an ongoing increase in the labour force.
By contrast, seasonally adjusted vacancies only increased by 2,000 in February, representing a slowdown versus an average monthly increase of 8,000 during 2015. Nevertheless, the upward trend observed since mid-2013 remains intact, and the monthly increase during the early phase of this upward trend between mid-2013 and end-2014 had indeed also been modest at 4,000. Vacancies have now reached a new cyclical and also all-time peak of 630,000. The upward trend in the previous cycle had begun at around 280,000 in mid-2009, leading to an interim high at 501,000 in January 2012, whereas the latest improvement had already started from a much higher low-point of 449,000 in June 2013.
Overall, labour market conditions remain healthier in Germany than in most other countries in Europe. The boosting effect that the Eurozone debt crisis had on German unemployment during 2012-13 was a very mild one that was already fully unwound by late 2014. Even the additional interim setback around mid-2014 due to temporary GDP stagnation had left only a small dent in the persisting underlying downward tendency for joblessness, and German consumer demand has consequently not been harmed. At the same time, employment developments have additionally been helped by the ongoing increase in the labour force, not least due to rising migration from troubled Eurozone countries and Eastern Europe. The massive increase in the refugee influx (mostly from the war-torn Middle East) in recent months will strengthen this tendency during 2016 as more and more asylum seekers obtain right of residence, although by the same token unemployment will also increase modestly due to a combination of the sheer numbers of refugees and the need to raise their qualification levels first (which – on average – will take years). Given the administrative lags involved as authorities are currently being overwhelmed by the numbers, however, German labour market statistics will only reflect this factor in a significant manner from roughly mid-2016 onwards. Meanwhile, the construction sector enjoys structurally robust demand conditions, partly related to sharply rising immigration but also due to government policies encouraging additional investment in infrastructure. Overall, underlying German economic growth will remain robust during 2016 despite lingering Eurozone stability concerns, various geopolitical crises with associated risks of enhanced terrorist activity, and economic problems in many emerging market countries. Sharply lower oil price levels than until mid-2014, a much softer euro, and the ECB’s policy of quantitative easing are all providing support for economic activity at present.
Following only 0.4% in 2013, GDP growth has already accelerated to around 1.5% during 2014-15, and February’s IHS forecast looks for modest further acceleration to 1.9% in 2016. This expectation of ongoing robust growth momentum is being underpinned by healthy signals coming from the services and construction sectors and the foreseeable increase in public consumption to care for refugees’ subsistence needs. By contrast, leading indicators reflecting manufacturing sector conditions in general and export prospects in particular (notably the relevant PMI survey and the Ifo business climate indicator) are more downbeat, but it should be remembered that this only represents about a quarter of Germany’s economy. On balance, German economic growth in 2016 continues to be expected to exceed the country’s current rate of potential growth, which we would estimate in a range of 1.25-1.50% at present. Taking the ramifications of refugee developments into account, IHS now expects unemployment in annual average terms to decline from 6.7% in 2014 and 6.4% in 2015 to 6.2% in 2016 before rebounding modestly to around 6.5% in 2017-18. It should be kept in mind that such slight deterioration of the unemployment statistic will go hand-in-hand with significant further growth in employment and thus income.
Finally, the general shift towards increased immigration since 2011, with considerably increased momentum observed since mid-2015, is substantially changing demographic dynamics and thus the long-term outlook at present. Thus the working-age population and also labour supply will not decline any time soon, instead increasing further at least for several years.

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