Colombia's unemployment rate falls to 10.9% in January 2026

In January 2026, Colombia's unemployment rate stood at 10.9%, the lowest for any January since 2001, with 324,000 more workers than in the same month of 2025. The number of unemployed people fell by 186,000 to 2.8 million. This improvement was driven by growth in self-employment and people leaving the labor force.

The National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) reported that in January 2026, Colombia had 23.2 million employed people, an increase of 324,000 from January 2025. The unemployment rate fell 0.7 percentage points, from 11.6% to 10.9%, according to César Mauricio López, director of Methodology and Statistical Production at Dane: "The unemployment rate is the lowest for any January since 2001".

The Global Participation Rate was 63.6%, down from 64.1% in January 2025, while the Occupation Rate remained at 56.7%. This rise in employed included 195,000 new self-employed workers, bringing their total to 9.58 million from 9.39 million. However, the economically active population dropped by 410,000 people, contributing to the decline in the unemployment rate.

By sex, unemployment was 8.7% for men and 13.8% for women, maintaining a significant gap. Among youth, it reached 15.3% in the mobile quarter. In the 13 main cities, the rate was 8.5%, below the previous 9.4%.

Sectors with the most new jobs were public administration and defense (+172,000) and professional and scientific activities (+155,000). In contrast, trade and vehicle repair lost 149,000 positions. Cities with the highest rates included Quibdó (24.6%), Cartagena (14.6%), and Riohacha (13.6%), while Bogotá (7.5%), Villavicencio (7.7%), and Manizales (7.7%) had the lowest.

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Happy Colombian workers in Bogotá celebrate unemployment rate dropping to 9.2%, lowest since 2001, with graph display and leaders applauding.
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Colombia's February unemployment rate drops to 9.2%

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Dane reported Colombia's February 2026 unemployment rate at 9.2%, the lowest for any February since 2001, with 2.45 million unemployed people. Occupied population rose to 24.09 million, up 624,000 from February 2025. President Gustavo Petro and Labor Minister Antonio Sanguino hailed the figures and defended the minimum wage increase.

In January 2026, Colombia's unemployment rate stood at 10.9%, the lowest for a first month since 2001, according to the Dane. While 324,000 new jobs were created, 60% were self-employment positions. This indicates employment improvement, but raises concerns about job quality.

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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.

The Philippines' unemployment rate held steady at 4.4% in December 2025, equivalent to 2.26 million jobless Filipinos, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority. While service sector jobs rose due to the holiday season, gains were offset by heavy losses in construction. The average unemployment rate for 2025 reached 4.2%, up from 3.8% in 2024.

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The National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) revealed that the Economic Tracking Indicator (ISE) grew 3.1% in November 2025 compared to the same month in 2024, marking 18 consecutive months of positive growth. However, the manufacturing sector showed limited progress with 0.7% production growth, while sales fell 0.4%, and retail commerce rose 7.5%. Overall industrial production varied by 1.7%, driven by electricity supply.

The Philippines' unemployment rate surged to 5.8% in January 2026—the highest since June 2022—up sharply from December 2025's 4.4%, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority. This affected 2.96 million unemployed Filipinos, with agriculture losing 1.42 million jobs due to weather disturbances.

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Colombia's January inflation hit 1.18% monthly, exceeding historical averages and highlighting the broad impact of the minimum wage increase on the IPC basket. The services component drove the uptick, with an annual variation of 6.33%. This breaks two months of moderation, pushing annual inflation to 5.35%.

 

 

 

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