Statistics Canada’s labour drive survey, launched this morning, confirmed the addition of 83,000 jobs in June—breaking a stretch of minimal employment progress since January.
The unemployment charge additionally edged down 0.1 proportion level to six.9%, after reaching a near-decade excessive final month. Economists had anticipated it to carry at 7% or rise to 7.1%. The employment charge ticked as much as 60.9%.
Youth employment remained a weak spot within the June information, nevertheless. The unemployment charge for returning college students aged 15 to 24 rose to 17.4%—the best for June since 2009, excluding the pandemic. Youthful teenagers had been hardest hit, with these aged 15 to 16 dealing with a 27.8% jobless charge, up 3.3 proportion factors from final 12 months.
Half-time positions accounted for the majority of June’s positive aspects, with a rise of 70,000 jobs. Employment additionally rose in each the personal sector (+47,000) and public sector (+23,000).
Many of the positive aspects had been concentrated in wholesale and retail commerce (+34,000), well being care and social help (+17,000), and manufacturing (+10,000). The agriculture sector noticed a modest decline of 6,000 positions, whereas employment was “little modified in different industries,” the company famous.
Common hourly wages rose 3.2% year-over-year to $36.01, easing barely from Could’s 3.4% improve.
BMO’s Benjamin Reitzes was happy with this morning’s information, however has a noticeable caveat: “One debatable blemish is that a lot of the positive aspects had been in part-time jobs. Regardless of the way you slice issues, this report is materially higher than anticipated.”
Tariff threats and CPI dangers anticipated to maintain BoC on maintain
Though this morning’s job numbers surpassed expectations, economists are viewing the info via a wider lens—one that features current tariff threats and broader financial dangers.
RBC’s Nathan Janzen views this morning’s information as largely optimistic, although not sufficient to dispel the coolness in comparison with final 12 months—particularly with current tariff threats looming massive.
“Canadian labour markets are nonetheless considerably weaker than they had been a 12 months in the past with weak spot concentrated in sectors and components of the nation extra delicate to worldwide commerce disruptions,” he wrote. “And commerce dangers stay with Canada added to a rising checklist of nations dealing with threatened new tariff hikes from the U.S. administration on August first.”
Reitzes, in the meantime, factors to ongoing financial uncertainty as a verify on this morning’s robust jobs information, which he believes could draw some skepticism. Whereas he sees the economic system as “hanging in there for now, pending the results of ongoing commerce negotiations,” he doesn’t count on the Financial institution of Canada to behave, given Canada’s sticky underlying inflation.
“Barring a pointy decline in underlying inflation in subsequent week’s June CPI report (which seems unlikely), the power in at the moment’s jobs information and the not too long ago heightened uncertainty on the commerce entrance probably hold the BoC on the sidelines when it meets later this month,” he wrote.
CIBC’s Katherine Decide provides a extra definitive tackle the BoC’s upcoming determination, noting that the complete influence of tariffs has probably not but proven up within the information.
“The Financial institution of Canada will use this report as a purpose to pause once more in July,” she wrote. “Nonetheless, this survey is risky and will simply reverse June’s strengths within the coming months, as we suspect that the complete tariff injury hasn’t totally been captured within the information but.”
Following the discharge, Canada’s 5-year bond yield rose 5 foundation factors to three.00%, whereas the 10-year yield climbed seven foundation factors to three.48%.
Unemployment charge by age group

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Final modified: July 11, 2025