Unemployment
25. Jun 2024
Unemployment at 0.9% in may
Unemployed people are registered as unemployed with the Faroese unemployment system and the social welfare services, fully available to the labour market and actively seeking work.
In May, the Faroese unemployment rate was 0.9%, equivalent to 285 full-time unemployed people. In May 2023, the rate was 0.7%, with 209 full-time unemployed people.
A full-time unemployed person is defined as one who is unemployed throughout a full month. If two persons are affected by unemployment for half a month each, they are converted to one full-time unemployed person for the month in question. In May, 319 people were affected by unemployment, an increase of 82 on May 2023.
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More unemployed men than women
There were 167 full-time unemployed men in May, equivalent to 1.0% of the labour force. This is a year-on-year increase of 0.3%. The May unemployment rate for women was 0.8% (118 full-time unemployed women), up 0.1% year-on-year.
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Highest rate in Suðuroy
The map below shows unemployment rates by region. In May, Suðuroy had the highest rate at 2.8%, while Sandoy had the lowest at 0.2%.
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Highest unemployment in age group 25-34
The 25-34 age group had an unemployment rate of 1.2% in May. The lowest rate (0.7%) was in the 55-66 age group.
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9.4% are long-term unemployed
The graph below shows how long people have been unemployed. In May, 30 people (9.4% of all unemployed people) were long-term unemployed, i.e. they had been out of work for more than a year. This percentage dropped 1.6% year-on-year, while the number of long-term unemployed people increased by four. In May, the largest group of unemployed people were those who have been out of work between 90 and 179 days.
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Unemployment as a concept
Statistics Faroe Islands and other statistics agencies across the world use the definitions of unemployment given by the International Labour Organisation (ILO), which is a United Nations agency.
According to this definition, the unemployment rate reflects the proportion of the labour force that does not have a job, is available to the labour market and is actively looking for work.
In the monthly unemployment reports from Statistics Faroe Islands, unemployed people are defined as those who are registered as unemployed with the Faroese unemployment system and the social welfare services and who meet the above definition of unemployment.