World Bank2015-08-172015-08-172015-08-14https://hdl.handle.net/10986/22413Global growth hit a soft patch at the start of 2015. In the first quarter it slowed to 2.0 percent, quarter on quarter (q/q) annualized, from 2.3 percent in the fourth quarter of 2014. The slowdown was reflected in a decline in global manufacturing activity, on the back of weak industrial production and goods trade data, especially in large emerging markets. Among high-income countries, economic activity is strengthening. Euro Area growth picked up to 1.6 percent in the first quarter of 2015 from 1.3 percent the previous quarter. Growth in Japan accelerated to 2.4 percent in the first quarter from 1.1 percent in the previous quarter. For the second quarter, despite the uncertainty surrounding Greece, the Euro Area Composite PMI in July remained close to a four-year high. Confidence indicators for the second quarter point to further improvements, while indicators in Japan also suggest continued, albeit moderate, growth.en-USCC BY 3.0 IGOLIVING STANDARDSJOBSAVERAGE UNEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTLABOR MARKET DEVELOPMENTMONETARY POLICYRISKSHOUSEHOLD SURVEYEMPLOYMENT RATEUNEMPLOYMENT RATESECONOMIC GROWTHPRODUCTIONAGGREGATE GROWTHAVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY GROWTHSKILLED WORKERSPREVIOUS SECTIONINCOMEAVERAGE UNEMPLOYMENT RATESERVICE SECTOREMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIESSKILLS DEVELOPMENTEXPECTED UNEMPLOYMENTLABOR FORCEEXPORTSHEALTH INSURANCEJOBS CREATIONPUBLIC SERVICESFISCAL POLICYJOBHOUSEHOLD ENTERPRISESRISING UNEMPLOYMENTTRAINING PROGRAMSRETAIL TRADELABOR FORCE PARTICIPATIONINFLATIONWAGE GROWTHJOB LOSSESLIFE EXPECTANCYTRENDSDRIVERSECONOMIC OUTLOOKWORK EXPERIENCEDEVELOPMENTDOMESTIC WORKERSLABOR MARKETWAGE BILLEMPLOYMENT LEVELSINFORMAL ECONOMYEDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENTLABOR–MARKETLABOR PRODUCTIVITY GROWTHWORKERINCOME INEQUALITYLABOR PRODUCTIVITYPRODUCTIVITYUNEMPLOYEDPRODUCTIVITY CONVERGENCEDEBTMARKETSVOCATIONAL EDUCATIONBUSINESS CYCLELABORPUBLIC WORKS PROGRAMSTOTAL EMPLOYMENTWAGE INCREASESKILLED WORKERFEMALE LABORPRODUCTIVITY GROWTH RATEUNEMPLOYMENTSKILL PREMIUMCONSUMPTIONPRODUCTIVITY GROWTHHUMAN CAPITALTRAINING SYSTEMVOCATIONAL TRAININGWORKERSCAPITALUNEMPLOYMENT RATELABOR DEMANDREAL WAGEAVERAGE WAGECOMPETITIVENESSINCOME DISTRIBUTIONSCLERKSMACROECONOMICSPRODUCTIVITY IMPROVEMENTDEMANDOCCUPATIONSAGGREGATE DEMANDINCOME DISTRIBUTIONPRIVATE SERVICESUNION ACTIVITYUNEMPLOYMENT INCREASEECONOMYEMPLOYMENT GROWTHJOB CREATIONLABOR RELATIONSPRIVATE SECTORHOUSEHOLD CHARACTERISTICSLABOR–MARKET REGULATIONSPUBLIC WORKSLABOR MARKET INDICATORSLABOR MARKET PERFORMANCEECONOMIC SITUATIONSKILLED LABORMANAGEMENTEMPLOYMENT IMPACTTRADETROUGHGDPEMPLOYMENT GROWTH RATESLABOUR FORCESKILLED OCCUPATIONSCREATING JOBSFEMALE LABOR FORCESUPPLYHOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTIONLABOR INTENSITYLABOR SUPPLYHIGH UNEMPLOYMENTUNSKILLED WORKERSEDUCATIONAL LEVELSPRODUCTIVITY GAINSYOUTH UNEMPLOYMENTLABOURLABOR MARKETSUNSKILLED LABORPRIVATE SECTORSSMALL BUSINESSESPRICESPRIVATE ENTERPRISEEMPLOYEESSouth Africa Economic Update, August 2015World BankJobs and South Africa’s Changing Demographics10.1596/22413