Job vacancy rate still highest in Czechia, but keeps declining
|On the radar
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Today, at 10 AM CET, Poland will release the set of data for November: industrial output growth, producer prices, employment and wage growth.
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In the afternoon, Czech central bank will announce the interest rate decision.
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Slovakia is scheduled to publish current account data.
Economic developments
Today, we look at the development of the job vacancy rate in the region (in seasonally adjusted terms). Czechia has been the country with the highest job vacancy rate, which has not changed recently, although job vacancy rate went visibly down to 3.3% in the third quarter compared to the peak above 6% in 2018. Interestingly, the number of job openings in Czechia declined and at the same time the number of occupied jobs increased visibly in recent quarter. There are roughly 100 thousand more occupied jobs in 2024 compared to the last year. Further, in Slovenia and Hungary the downward trend in job vacancy rate is also present, yet the peak was at a much lower level compared to Czechia and was reached in the course of 2022. By contrast, the lowest job vacancy rates were observed in Romania (0.8%) and in Poland (0.9%). Moreover, Romania and Poland have the lowest job vacancy rates not only in the region but in the whole Europe. In both countries, the job vacancy rate has been oscillating around 1% along with Slovakia.
Market developments
The Czech central bank is likely to leave key policy rate unchanged at today’s meeting (and last in 2024). The interest rate was brough down to 4% throughout the year and we expect a pause in the monetary easing cycle in Czechia as inflation has been rising toward the end of the year. Further, the Czech koruna alongside other CEE currencies have been weakening against the euro lately. This week, the Hungarian forint has been underperforming as EURHUF moved toward 413 losing roughly 1% against the euro since the beginning of the week. Romania rushes to install a new government with pro-European majority and according to the press releases a new government may be approved by the middle of the next week. Preparing a fiscal consolidation plan will be the major task given the recent “warning signal” from Fitch (change of the outlook to negative). Bond market has been relatively stable this week apart from Romania where long-term yields moved up.
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