七つのスペインの地域は10の最もEU失業間にある
Seven Spanish regions are among the 10 most EU unemployment
The regions with lower unemployment are taken over by Germany and Austria
Siete regiones españolas están entre las 10 con más desempleo de la UE
Las regiones con menos paro son acaparadas por Alemania y Austria
El País Madrid 22 MAY 2013 - 12:42 CET
Seven Spanish regions are among the 10 most EU unemployment
The regions with lower unemployment are taken over by Germany and Austria
The Country Madrid 22 MAY 2013 - 12:42 CET
Seven of the 10 regions with the highest unemployment in the 27 countries of the European Union (EU) in 2012 were Spanish, so say the data published Eurostat, the EU statistics office. Unemployment, according to the Labour Force Survey (LFS) for the first quarter of 2013 affected the 27.2% of people of working age (euro zone rate is 12.1%), again better exemplify any other economic indicator the severity of the economic crisis in Spain. Ceuta, with a rate of 38.5%, Anadalucia (34.6%), Extremadura (33%) and the Canary Islands, also with 33%, the worst record data on the continent. Furthermore, Melilla (28.6%), Castilla-La Mancha (28.5%) and Murcia (27.9%), are also among the 10 worst in Europe.
moreMore than six million unemployedCondemned to perpetual unemploymentThe unemployed with more than three years over a millionGermany offers to give jobs to thousands of young SpanishSpanish emigration to Germany fires at the level of 40 years ago
Spanish regions only leave space in the top ten European two Greek regions Dykiti Macedonia, fifth with 29.9%, and Sterea Ellada, tenth with 27.8% and Reunion, a French overseas territory, which is seventh with 28.6%.
Unemployment also used to check the differences in the economic situation within the Union and the eurozone. Austria and Germany, the euro, concentrated regions where full employment is a reality. The Austrian Salzburg (2.5%) and Tirol (2.5%) have the lowest recorded unemployment in Europe. The Baden-Württemberg German (2.7%), Bavaria (2.7%), Rhineland-Palatinate (2.7%) and Freiburg (2.9%), they also enjoy minimum rates. The Czech capital, Prague (3.1%), is the only region outside the single currency that blows between German-speaking neighbors in Central Europe. The Dutch Zealand, with 3.1%, and the austrica Styria, with 3.2%, complete a list that shows only four countries.
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