84050_not-searchable
/en/arbeid-og-lonn/statistikker/akumnd/arkiv
84050
Small changes in the labour market
statistikk
2012-08-22T10:00:00.000Z
Labour market and earnings;Labour market and earnings
en
akumnd, Labour force survey, seasonally-adjusted figures, LFS, labour market, employees, unemployed, economically active, man-weeks worked, labour forceUnemployment , Employment , Labour market and earnings
false

Labour force survey, seasonally-adjusted figuresJune 2012

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Small changes in the labour market

The labour market remained stable from March to June. The unemployment rate was 3.0 per cent in June.

Unemployed (LFS), registered unemployed and registered unemployed plus government initiatives to promote employment. Seasonally-adjusted figures, three-month moving average in 1 000. 2006-2012

Seasonally-adjusted unemployment in selected countries, 2006-2012. Percentage of the labour force

The seasonally-adjusted unemployment in June (average of May-July) of 3.0 per cent of the labour force corresponded to 82 000 persons. This was unchanged compared with March (average of February-April). In comparison, the number of people registered as unemployed or on government initiatives to promote employment with the Labour and Welfare Administration (NAV) increased by 2 000 persons during the same period. These figures have also been adjusted for seasonal variations.

Stable employment

Adjusted for seasonal variations, employment increased by 6 000 from March to June. The increase is within the Labour Force Survey (LFS) error margin. However, the increase is consistent with earlier increases in employment in the past year. The employment rate was 69.4 per cent in June, down 0.1 percentage points from March. The employment rate is employed persons as a percentage of the population.

The labour force is the total of employed and unemployed persons between 15-74 years of age. From March to June 2012, the LFS indicated an increase in employment of 6 000 persons, while the unemployment remained unchanged. This gives an increase in the labour force of 6 000 persons.

Coherence between the concepts

Unemployed + Employed = Labour force

Labour force + Outside the labour force = Population

Unemployment up in Sweden and Denmark

From March to June, unemployment increased by 0.2 percentage points in Sweden and by 0.4 percentage points in Denmark. In June, the unemployment rate was 7.5 per cent in Sweden and 8.0 per cent in Denmark. In the EU15, the unemployed as a percentage of the labour force increased from 10.4 per cent in March to 10.6 per cent in June. During the same period, the unemployment rate in the USA remained unchanged at 8.2 per cent. The international figures refer to seasonally-adjusted data from Eurostat .

Employment (LFS). Seasonally-adjusted figures and trend figures. Three-month moving average in 1 000. 2006-2012

Unemployment (LFS). Seasonally-adjusted figures and trend figures. Three-month moving average. 2006-2012. As a percentage of the labour force.

Employment and unemployment figures include permanent residents

The LFS only includes persons who are registered as residents in the population register. Persons working in Norway who are not registered as permanent residents or who are planning to stay for less than six months are not included in the employment figure in the LFS. If these people lose their job it does not count as a fall in employment or a rise in unemployment. In national accounts figures (NR), employed non-residents are included in the employment figure as long as they work in an establishment in Norway. If employment decreases in this group it will count as a fall in employment in NR. Statistics Norway publishes separate figures for all registered non-residents once a year. See short-term immigrants .

Uncertain figures

The purpose of making seasonal adjustments is to describe the development over the last year, corrected for seasonal variations. In order to reduce uncertainty, the published series are three-month moving averages of the seasonally-adjusted figures. However, uncertainty means that sampling errors must be considered when interpreting the figures from the LFS. We normally compare the latest non-overlapping three-month periods. An overview of sampling errors in the LFS can be found in “ About the statistics ”, chapter 5, section 3.

The complete time series is re-estimated each month, and this may cause some adjustments of previously published figures. See Revisions for more information . Interviews that arrive late are included in the LFS the following month. This applies to the first two months in each quarter.

Quarterly LFS figures, not seasonally adjusted, are presented in a separate article .

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