Alberta jobless rate hits near 22-year high, ahead of Nova Scotia for first time
CALGARY — Alberta’s monthly unemployment rate climbed to its highest level in nearly 22 years in July, marking the first time the province has had a worse jobless rate than Nova Scotia, Statistics Canada said Friday.
The federal agency reported that Alberta’s rate rose to 8.6 per cent last month — the highest since September 1994 — from 7.9 per cent in June.
That’s above the 8.4 per cent July unemployment rate in Nova Scotia, the first time Alberta has had a higher rate since Statistics Canada started collecting the data in 1976.
“Obviously, Nova Scotia’s unemployment rate has improved in recent years,” said BMO chief economist Doug Porter. “This isn’t entirely a bad news story, but it’s largely a bad news story because of the upswing in Alberta.”


