Johannesburg – Unemployment in South Africa soared to its highest level in 13 years in the second quarter of this year – with more than one in three of the working population looking for a job in the continent’s most industrialised economy – as coronavirus restrictions shackle growth, official data showed on Tuesday.
The jobless rate – which measures the total number of people out of work against the working population as a whole – rose to 34.4% in the April-June period from 32.6% in the preceding three months, Statistics South Africa said in a statement.
That was the highest level since the agency began compiling quarterly unemployment data in 2008.
In concrete terms, the total number of people out of work in South Africa increased by 584 000 to 7.8 million in the second quarter, the statisticians calculated.
ALSO READ | Mango employees’ salaries ‘to be paid in full’
The country has an overall population of 59 million.
Most of the job losses were recorded in the financial, service and industrial sectors.
Black women were hit hardest, too, with their jobless rate standing at 41 percent, compared with just 8.2 percent for white women, the statistics office said.
Overall, the proportion of women out of work is higher than men, standing at 36.8 percent and 32.4 percent respectively.
South Africa is the country that has been hit hardest by the Covid-19 pandemic in Africa.
Already in recession before the global outbreak, its economy shrank by seven percent last year.
Unemployment rates in South Africa have stood at over 20 percent for at least two decades.
Follow African Insider on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
Source: AFP
Picture: Getty Images
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com