By Jamie McGeever
BRASILIA (Reuters) – Brazil’s economy lost 1.2 million formal jobs in the first half of the year, official figures showed on Tuesday, but the losses almost evaporated in June, indicating that the labor market may be over the worst of the coronavirus crisis.
The economy lost just 10,984 formal jobs in June, Economy Ministry figures showed, by far the smallest monthly decline since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic earlier this year.
While it marked the fourth month in a row of jobs losses, the decline was significantly less than that seen in each of the previous three months when hundreds of thousands of jobs were lost.
It followed an upwardly revised 350,000 formal job losses in May and brought the net loss in the first six months of the year to almost 1.2 million, the figures showed.
While June clearly marked an improvement on recent months, the accumulated job losses in the first half of this year are roughly double and treble the same periods in 2015 and 2016, respectively, when Brazil was last in deep recession.
The number of formally registered jobs in Brazil stood at 37.6 million in June, the lowest figure for any June since 2011, the Economy Ministry said.
So far this year, just over half a million jobs have been lost in the services sector, just under half a million in commerce, and almost a quarter of a million in industry. The agriculture sector has added a net 62,633 jobs, the figures showed.
Brazil’s official unemployment rate stands at a two-year high of 12.9%, and is expected to rise further in the coming months.
Economic Policy Secretary Adolfo Sachsida has said that the statistics agency IBGE is probably undercounting the number of people out of work, and that unemployment will peak around September.
(Reporting by Jamie McGeever; Editing by Bernadette Baum)


