Unemployment rate remains at 4.4% in December 2025

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.

On February 6, 2026, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) announced that the unemployment rate stayed at 4.4% in December 2025, slightly up from November's 2.25 million jobless and down from December 2024's 3.1% or 1.63 million. This pushed the full-year average to 4.2%, compared to 3.8% in 2024. Underemployment fell to 8% or 3.93 million Filipinos, from 10.4% or 5.11 million in November.

National Statistician Dennis Mapa noted that administrative and support services, such as call centers, added 385,000 jobs year-on-year, while accommodation and food services gained 280,000 amid the holidays. However, construction lost 550,000 jobs, and transport and storage shed 258,000.

Mapa linked the construction losses to historic lows in activity during the fourth quarter, tied to a corruption scandal in flood control projects. 'And we know na-report natin noong fourth quarter GDP, ‘di ba, na ‘yung fourth quarter, bumaba talaga…negative growth rate doon sa construction, particularly public construction,' he explained.

The PSA reported that the construction sector contracted 41.9% in Q4 2025 due to an ongoing probe into anomalous flood control projects, contributing to the economy's mere 3% growth that quarter, below expectations.

The Department of Economy, Planning, and Development (DEPDev) described the figures as signaling a labor market slowdown. Discouraged workers rose to 7.7% from 6.3% in December 2024, said Undersecretary Rosemarie Edillon. 'As we make 2026 a rally point to revitalize [the Philippine Development Plan] implementation, we will prioritize employment creation by restoring consumer and business confidence, reduce the cost of doing business, encourage innovation, and expand training and reskilling opportunities,' she stated. The government aims to resume delayed infrastructure and bolster high-value sectors like business process management.

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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.

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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DANE reported a 10.9% unemployment rate for January 2026, the lowest in recent history for a first month of the year, despite a 23% minimum wage increase. Informality dropped to 55%, and the employed population grew by 324,000 people. Yet, these official figures are sparking political polarization.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics' February 2026 employment report revealed a 92,000 decline in nonfarm payrolls—the second-worst monthly drop in three years—reversing January's revised 126,000 gain and extending the slowdown from December's 50,000 increase. Released March 7, the data showed unemployment rising 0.1 percentage point in a low-hiring, low-firing labor market.

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Following late-2025 reports of economic promise and investor optimism based on preliminary data, South Africa's gross domestic product expanded by just 1.1% for the full year of 2025—up from 0.5% in 2024 but below the Treasury's 1.4% estimate. Quarterly growth hit 0.4% in Q4 after a revised 0.3% in Q3. Industrial sectors like mining and manufacturing contracted, offset by gains in finance and investment.

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