Statistics Canada says the economy shed 25,000 jobs in January but a drop in the number of people looking for work drove the unemployment rate down to 6.5% in the month.
January’s job losses mostly came from the private sector and part-time work, and were largely concentrated among women aged 25 to 54.
Ontario bore the weight of job losses last month, particularly in the manufacturing sector.
Statistics Canada said manufacturing shed 28,000 positions in January and is down roughly 51,000 jobs from a year earlier – before U.S. tariffs hampered the industry.
Also seeing losses were the education sector and the professional, scientific and technical services industry. There were some gains in the information, culture and recreation sector and the business, building and other support services industries to offset the losses.
January’s labour force survey marks the first net loss of jobs since August.
The unemployment rate fell from 6.8% in December despite the job losses because fewer people were looking for work in January, Statistics Canada said.
Bradley Saunders, North America economist at Capital Economics, said in a note to clients that January’s 119,000-person decline in the size of the labour force was the largest drop in five years.
He said that “collapsing population growth” means the economy doesn’t need as much job creation to keep the unemployment rate steady each month. He expects further declines in the jobless rate this year.
There were 12.4 million people aged 15 and older outside the labour force in January, according to the agency, up 2.7% year-over-year.
Of those, 34,000 people, or 0.3%, were deemed discouraged workers – those who don’t believe there’s work out there that fits their skills. This proportion is up a tenth of a percentage point from a year ago.
Statistics Canada said the unemployment rate for young workers aged 15 to 24 dropped half a percentage point in January as fewer youth searched for work. The share of youth who reported their main activity as attending school was up 2.2 percentage points year-over-year.
Statistics Canada’s additional surveys last month suggested a growing share of workers in industries dependent on U.S. trade are considering a career move in the coming year.
Some 5.4% of permanent core-aged employees in sectors reliant on U.S. demand for Canadian exports were planning to leave their jobs in the next year, up 1.5 percentage points year-over-year.
Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said in a speech Thursday that he expects an “uneven” recovery in the labour market this year as some sectors and occupations see gains but others face slower improvement.
The central bank held its benchmark interest rate steady at 2.25% last week. Its next decision is set for March 18.
TD Bank senior economist Andrew Hencic said in a note that, despite the job losses, the falling unemployment rate “suggests the labour market is better than expected – but not necessarily tight.”
He said there is little in the January jobs numbers to move the needle for the Bank of Canada and he expects the central bank will wait longer on the sidelines for more economic data before making any further rate adjustments.