'Worst jobs reading in three years' raises odds of Bank of Canada rate cut next month
Canada shed 41,000 jobs in July, the worst showing since January 2022
Author of the article:By Gigi Suhanic
Published Aug 08, 2025
Last updated 21 hours ago
4 minute read
Canadas jobs market turned on its head in July, shedding 41,000 positions after gaining 83,000 in June. ... Analysts had called for an additional 10,000 jobs last month. ... Heres what economists think about the jobs numbers and what they could mean for the Bank of Canada and interest rates.
Unambiguously weak: BMO
Our overall score for this (jobs) report was just 22.5 (out of 100), the worst reading in three years, Douglas Porter, chief economist at BMO Economics, said in a note.
Signs of weakness were scattered throughout the data. ... For example, while 10 of 16 sectors shed jobs, most of the losses were full-time, private-sector positions. Total hours worked declined, which bodes ill for gross domestic product in July, Porter said. ... Wage growth is also down two percentage points from the same time last year, at 3.3 per cent. In June, wage growth came in at 3.1 per cent.
Four provinces recorded job losses, but unfortunately it was the largest four, said Porter, with British Columbia and Alberta each shedding just over 16,000 positions. That lifted Albertas unemployment rate to 7.9 per cent, compared to the national average of 6.9 per cent.
This is an unambiguously weak report
although it comes hard on the heels of an unambiguously strong report. Taken together, the overall picture is a soft economy, running with some excess capacity not surprising in light of the trade uncertainty, he said. ... Porter thinks the job market will continue to slow, in turn putting downward pressure on inflation, eventually supporting the case for a return to modest rate cuts.
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