1053_not-searchable
/en/arbeid-og-lonn/statistikker/innvarbl/arkiv
1053
Immigrant unemployment continues to rise
statistikk
2009-11-05T10:00:00.000Z
Labour market and earnings;Immigration and immigrants
en
innvarbl, Registered unemployed among immigrants (discontinued in Statistics Norway), labour market initiatives, immigrant background, period of residenceUnemployment , Labour market and earnings, Labour market and earnings, Immigration and immigrants
false

Registered unemployed among immigrants (discontinued in Statistics Norway)Q3 2009

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Immigrant unemployment continues to rise

Registered unemployment among immigrants increased from 4.6 per cent in August 2008 to 7.5 per cent in August 2009. In the rest of the population, this rate increased from 1.5 to 2.5 per cent. The relative growth was almost the same within both population groups.

A total of 20 153 immigrants settled in Norway were registered unemployed in the third quarter of 2009. There was an increase of 9 000 unemployed immigrants from the corresponding quarter in the previous year. Immigrants from the EU countries in Eastern Europe represented one third of this growth. Settled immigrants constituted in total 26 per cent of the total number of 77 100 registered unemployed in Norway in the third quarter.

NAV reports that 4 700 persons were incorrectly registered unemployed in February 2010. The erroneous figure was lower in previous months, but dates back to October 2008. Read more on NAV's website, or contact stein.langeland@nav.no

Immigrants are defined as being born abroad by foreign-born parents, and they are all registered as residents in Norway. Among the registered unemployed, some non-registered residents are also included. These people are settled abroad and are expected to stay in Norway less than six months. This group is not included among the immigrants but is a part of the rest of the population. See the table below on this page for further information. The unemployment figures are based on the Norwegian Labour and Welfare Organisation’s register of job seekers and are calculated as a fraction of the labour force. Norwegian-born to immigrant parents (previously referred to as “descendants”) are not counted as immigrants.

Unemployed not registered as residents

A total of 1 288 of the unemployed were not registered as residents in Norway in the third quarter of 2009. Of those non-residents, 469 were citizens from the EU countries in Eastern Europe and 371 from the Nordic countries. The group of unemployed non-residents has doubled since the third quarter of 2008 when it constituted 615 people. Almost 83 per cent of the non-residents were men. (See tables 7 and 8.) In the text below, only the resident group of immigrants is mentioned, unless otherwise indicated.

Registered unemployed, by resident status. By the end of August 2008 and 2009
  August 2008 August 2009 Change 2008-2009
Registered unemployed in total 44 364 77 109 32 745
       
Unemployed registered as residents 43 749 75 821 32 072
Of which:      
Immigrants 11 140 20 153 9 013
The rest of the population 43 749 75 821 32 072
Unemployed not registered as residents  615 1 288  673

Still strongest increase among those from the EU countries in the east

Immigrants from EU countries in Eastern Europe had a growth in the unemployment rate of 6 percentage points since the third quarter of 2008. As for the other immigrant groups, the growth among the Africans and the Latin Americans was 3.8 and 3.3 percentage points respectively, while in both the Asian and the Eastern European group (outside the EU) the growth was about 2.5 percentage points. The Western European and the Nordic group had a growth of about 1.5 percentage points each. It must, however, be emphasised that the level was very low within these two groups in the third quarter of 2008. Thus, the relative growth is stronger compared to groups with much higher unemployment rates at the starting point.

The growth in the unemployment from the third quarter of 2008 to 2009 gave rates of about 8 per cent in both of the Eastern European groups together with the Latin American group and 9 per cent among the Asians. However, the Africans still had the highest unemployment rate, at 14.2 per cent. As usual, immigrants from the Nordic countries and Western Europe had the lowest rates, at about 3.0 per cent in each group.

Men are more affected by the rise in unemployment

Immigrant men still experience a much stronger growth in the unemployment rate than immigrant women, i.e. 3.9 versus 1.6 percentage points. This gave rates of 8 and 6.9 per cent respectively in the third quarter of 2009. In the rest of the population, the unemployment rate among men was 2.8 per cent and 2.1 among women. Also within this majority population we find the strongest growth among males (1.4 versus 0.6 percentage points). This tendency is due to the increased unemployment within male dominated industries, such as construction and some manufacturing in particular. This fact also explains the strong growth in the unemployment rate among male immigrants from the EU countries in Eastern Europe who are strongly represented within the construction industry.

Immigrants from Eastern Europe outside the EU, Asia1, Africa, South and Central America and Oceania except Australia and New Zealand who are registered unemployed or participants in ordinary labour market schemes as a percentage of the population 15-74 years of age by county of residence. By the end of August 2009

Increase also among Norwegian-born to immigrant parents

Norwegian-born to immigrant parents (previously referred to as “descendants”) is still a rather small group of registered unemployed despite a growth among them - from 354 in August 2008 to 689 in August 2009. The majority within this group are aged 15-29 years, and the unemployment rate among them was 4.9 per cent, which was 0.5 percentage point higher than the corresponding age group in the population as a whole.

Increase among participants on labour market schemes

The number of immigrants on ordinary labour market schemes (job programmes) increased from

3 411 in August 2008 to 4 637 in August 2009, i.e. 1 226 more participants and hence a growth of 36 per cent. Among non-immigrants, the number of participants increased by 2 900 participants, which was a growth of 68 per cent. In total, 11 790 people participated in labour market schemes, and immigrants constituted 39 per cent of them.

As a percentage of the immigrant population aged 15-74 years, the participation rate within this group was 1.2 per cent. In the rest of the population, the participation rate was 0.2 per cent. Immigrants from Africa had the highest participation rate at 2.8 per cent in August 2009. Above 70 per cent of all participants who are immigrants came from Asia or Africa.

Tables: