Colombia adds 603,000 jobs in December 2025 amid persistent informality

In December 2025, Colombia created 603,000 new jobs, lowering the unemployment rate to 8.0%, a drop of 1.1 percentage points from 2024. Yet, 55.5% of workers, or about 13.45 million people, remain in informal employment. Experts note progress but warn of ongoing structural challenges in the labor market.

The National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) reported that by December 2025, the occupied population reached 24.2 million people, with 2.1 million unemployed, equivalent to an 8.0% national rate. This figure shows annual improvement, as unemployment in December 2024 was 9.1%. The addition of 603,000 jobs marks a 2.6% year-over-year increase, driven mainly by manufacturing industries, which contributed 2.2 percentage points, and sectors like public administration, education, and health, each adding 0.5 points.

Despite these gains, labor informality remains a dominant issue. Of the employed, 13.45 million work informally, an increase of 52,000 people from the previous year, while 10.7 million hold formal jobs. Andi president Bruce Mac Master stated: “While there was job creation, important challenges persist, such as high labor informality and the need to create more and better employment opportunities.”

By sector, agriculture, livestock, and fishing lead with 85% informality, followed by lodging and food services at 76.2%. In cities, Sincelejo has 67.9%, while Bogotá records the lowest at 35%. Dane director Piedad Urdinola noted: “The cities with the highest proportion of informally occupied population for October-December 2025 are Sincelejo (67.9%), followed by Valledupar (66%) and Cúcuta (63.6%).”

Davibank economist Valentina Guio remarked: “Despite the improvement in informality, with an annual average of 55.7%, participation and occupation levels remain below pre-pandemic records.” Annually, the participation rate was 64.3% and occupation 58.6%. The highest unemployment rates were in Quibdó (23.1%) and Cartagena (14.1%).

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Photorealistic image of happy Colombian workers symbolizing 8.2% unemployment rate drop, blending formal and informal jobs in urban setting.
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Colombia's unemployment rate falls to 8.2% in October 2025

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Dane reported that Colombia's unemployment rate in October 2025 was 8.2%, the lowest for an October since 2017, with 2.1 million people unemployed. This marks a drop of 0.9 percentage points from October 2024. However, Andi warned about the rise in labor informality amid job creation.

Colombia's National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE) reported that the unemployment rate for 2025 was 8.9%, the lowest since 2001. This figure marks a 1.3 percentage point decrease from 2024. In December 2025, the rate fell to 8%, with employed population rising by 603,000 people.

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Colombia's rural sector recorded 4.8 million occupied people in 2025, the highest figure since 2021, according to DANE. The rural unemployment rate dropped to 6.7%, the lowest in seven years, driven by 103,000 new jobs in agriculture. Agriculture Minister Martha Carvajalino credited these advances to policies under President Gustavo Petro's government.

Following stalled talks where unions demanded a 16% rise and businesses warned of economic risks, President Gustavo Petro decreed on December 30 a 23% increase in Colombia's 2026 minimum wage, to 1,750,905 pesos plus 24.5% higher transportation aid of 249,095 pesos, totaling 2 million pesos monthly. The hike benefits 2.4 million formal workers and aims for an ILO 'vital wage,' but prompts debate on inflation, SME impacts, and competitiveness.

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Mexico's informal economy reached its highest contribution to GDP in 2024, accounting for 25.4% of the total, according to preliminary INEGI data. This marks a 3.2 percentage point increase since 2020, underscoring the persistence of labor informality affecting 54.4% of the employed population.

President Claudia Sheinbaum celebrated that Mexico will end the year with an unemployment rate of 2.7 percent, just behind Japan. In a message on X, she highlighted the results of the country's economic transformation. The claim is based on comparative data from 14 nations.

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Following initial government signals of a 12%+ increase, Colombia's labor unions and pensioners have submitted reservations to the proposed 16% rise for the 2026 minimum wage. Unions demand exceeding inflation to cover family basket costs, citing constitutional and ILO backing, while businesses warn of job losses, higher costs, and political motivations.

 

 

 

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