Canada gained surprising 79,000 jobs in November
Canada added 79,000 jobs last month as the country's unemployment rate dipped 0.1 percentage points to 8.5 per cent.
Statistics Canada said Friday that full-time employment increased by 39,000 in November, the third consecutive monthly increase, while part-time employment grew by 40,000, following two months of declines.
The job growth far surpassed the consensus expectations of economists, who had been projecting the creation of 15,000 jobs, and for the unemployment rate to rise to 8.7 per cent.
Calling the jobs report "stunning," a TD Economics report took particular note of how broad-based the gains were.
"We can't help but be encouraged by the fact that all provinces [except Manitoba, and marginally so] were posting employment gains as of November."
"Unless productivity cratered, the data suggest decent and regionally based gains in real GDP in Q4," the report said.
In October, the country shed 43,200 jobs as the national unemployment rate came in at 8.6 per cent.
Statistics Canada said almost all the job growth last month was attributable to the service sector, which added 73,000 jobs. Within that sector, roughly 38,000 positions were created in educational services.
Employment in the goods-producing sector showed little change in November.
In the provinces
Ontario added 27,000 jobs in November — the largest gain in the province since September 2008. The province's unemployment rate, however, remained unchanged at 9.3 per cent.
In Quebec, employment grew by 21,000 in November, pushing the province's unemployment rate down 0.4 percentage points to 8.1 per cent.
Employment in Alberta rose by 13,000 last month, the largest monthly increase in the province since October 2008.
The Royal Bank of Canada was cautiously optimistic on the report, but was not prepared to downplay the threat of unemployment moving forward.
"The labour data have been very volatile but, on net, 66,500 jobs were created in the three months to November, which supports our call for more robust growth in the fourth quarter," RBC economist Dawn Desjardins said.