The chief statistical agency of the European Commission has revealed that the Eurozone’s unemployment rate, which hit 8.7 percent in November, is now at its lowest since January 2009.
According to a Eurostat report cited by media outlets, the number of unemployed has receded all across Europe, including countries like Greece and Portugal that were severely affected by the debt crisis.
Lowest unemployment, 11/17: 🇨🇿 Czech Republic 2.5%, 🇲🇹 Malta & 🇩🇪 Germany 3.6%. Highest: 🇬🇷 Greece 20.5% (09/17), 🇪🇸 Spain 16.7% #Eurostat https://t.co/R55hXcIQNm pic.twitter.com/a2ET97Qh1T
— EU Social (@EU_Social) 9 января 2018 г.
However, the Financial Times points out that comparing figures from individual countries reveals significant divergences: Germany and Malta, for example, boast a mere 3.6 percent unemployment rate; Italy and Cyprus have an 11 percent unemployment; and Greece displays a joblessness rate of 20.5 percent.
Earlier, data firm IHS Markit reported that business activity in Eurozone surged in December, boosted by “strong factory output and an upturn in the service sector."


