At a Parliamentary Minority session, MP Irakli Abesadze spoke about joblessness and noted that unemployment increased in 2016 because the number of those employed decreased. He also stated

that the unemployment percentage figure published by the National Statistics Office of Georgia does not give a precise picture because a person is considered employed if he has worked at least one hour during the last seven days.

FactCheck

took interest in the accuracy of Irakli Abesadze’s statement.

The National Statistics Office of Georgia (NSOG) determines the unemployment rate in accordance with the International Labour Organization’s (ILO)

methodology which stipulates that a person who has worked at least one hour during the last seven days is considered to be employed. In addition, persons working on household farms (self-employed) are also categorised as being employed.

The unemployment rate is defined as the share of unemployed persons in the total workforce. The workforce is comprised of both employed and unemployed individuals. A person is considered as unemployed if he has not worked during a week (even for an hour) prior to the National Statistics Office of Georgia survey, has been looking for a job during the last four weeks and was ready to start working in the next two weeks. Therefore, all other individuals (including persons under the age of 15 years, conscripts, prisoners and everyone else not looking for a job) do not belong to the workforce and changes in their numbers are not reflected in the statistical data produced by the National Statistics Office of Georgia.

According to the data

of the National Statistics Office of Georgia, the country’s unemployment rate decreased by 0.2 of a percentage point in 2016 as compared to 2015 and constitutes 11.8%. However, the number of employed persons did not increase but, on the contrary, dropped from 1,779,900 to 1,763,300.

Graph 1:

 Changes in Unemployment rate and Number of Employed Individuals

image002

Graph 1 illustrates that the number of employed individuals did not increase in 2015-2016 in spite of the decrease in the unemployment rate. This means that the number of people who do not belong to the workforce and are economically inactive, have not worked during the seven days prior to the National Statistics Office of Georgia’s survey and were not looking for job during the last four weeks is on the rise. This is the very factor behind the decrease in the unemployment rate and in fact this does not indicate a growth in the number of employed individuals.

Graph 2:

 Amount of Population, Workforce and People Out of the Workforce (thousand persons)

image004

In accordance with the data of the National Statistics Office of Georgia, the country’s population decreased by 2,200 and the workforce dropped by 23,200 during the period verified by FactCheck.

This factor indicates that the decrease in Georgia’s workforce is not correlated to the amount of its population.

Conclusion

In spite of the fact that the unemployment rate decreased from 12% to 11.8% in 2016, the number of employed persons dropped by 16,600 in the same period. In fact, the decrease in the unemployment rate is caused by a declining number of economically active persons in the country as 23,200 persons left the workforce.

FactCheck concludes that Irakli Abesadze’s statement is MOSTLY TRUE.

Persons

Similar News

5362 - Verified Facts
FactCheck Newspaper
26%
True
17%
Lie
11%
Mostly True
10%
Manipulation
9%

Most read