(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Confidence high, but jobs falling
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20140809135402/http://www.newsinenglish.no/2014/05/21/confidence-high-but-jobs-falling/

Confidence high, but jobs falling

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New figures show the number of vacant jobs dropped dramatically in Norway over the past year, making competition more fierce and signalling tougher times. Optimism remained high among Norwegians however, with the latest consumer outlook survey showing increased confidence and school dropout rates remaining relatively high, as is the trend in prosperous times.

PHOTO: Norges Bank

New figures from Statistics Norway show a sharp drop in the number of job advertisements over the past year, signalling tougher times ahead. Consumer confidence is nevertheless continuing to recover, in regards to both Norwegians’ personal finances and the expectations for the national economy. PHOTO: Norges Bank

Statistics Norway (Statistisk Sentralbyrå, SSB) found there were 61,000 job vacancies at the end of March, 6,500 fewer than the same time last year, reported newspaper VG on Wednesday. The private sector saw the biggest drop, with 2,000 fewer vacancies between the first quarter of 2013 and the first quarter of this year. However, the branch still has the highest percentage of vacant positions, at 5.3 percent.

An overview of online job advertisements by search engine Rubrikk.no supported the SSB findings. It found that in May, there were 7,500 fewer vacancies than in the past year, reported Norwegian Broadcasting (NRK). In the last month alone there has been a 26 percent downturn in the number of available positions across many industries.

“It suggests that there are very many large companies in Norway which are now taking a breather and considering what they will do with their organization,” said Rubrikk founder Adil Osmani. “They have simply stopped hiring new people.”

Business confidence dropping, consumer confidence rising
Svein Oppegaard, the director of the major employers’ organization the Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise (Næringslivets Hovedorganisasjon, NHO) said it’s a clear sign labour demand is slowing, and the market is getting tougher.

“This holds true very much with the signals we have from our member companies in our economic barometer,” he told VG. “There is a downturn in the activity, and that is reflected of course in less need for manpower and fewer advertisements for vacant jobs.”

At the same time, consumer confidence is growing. Finance Norway’s quarterly expectations survey looks at people’s confidence, both in terms of their personal finance and the national economy. While expectations are still lower than they were at the same time last year, the survey found Norwegians are slowly becoming more optimistic after a sharp drop in the fourth quarter of 2013. From the second quarter of 2013 until the first quarter of 2013, economic expectations dropped from 23.2 to 16.3, but have now made a modest rise to 16.8.

“The main figures show good faith in the future, but at the same time a good amount of room for sobriety in Norwegian households,” managing director Idar Kreutzer told NRK. “It is perhaps not so surprising. We see that unemployment is low, wage settlements have been stable at a relatively high level, and we have been through a period where we have lowered expectations for the economy in Norway. This has now turned around.”

Kreutzer said Norwegians are also putting more money away, with household bank savings increasing by almost seven percent over the course of a year from NOK 890 to 950 billion. “We must go back to 1994 to find comparably high rates of intention to save, and we had just had a bank crisis then, so people were very motivated to be cautious,” he said. People are choosing to invest in property, renovations and cars, while holiday cabin purchase rates remained stable, and spending on boats is relatively low.

Youth want a piece of the prosperity
The consumer optimism is reflected in the relatively high school dropout rates that have persisted for several years, reported newspaper Aftenposten. SSB figures showed just 69 percent of students who started high school in 2007 completed within five years. The numbers are particularly low for students doing vocational training, with only 55 percent completing in five years.

Kristine von Simson from the Institute for Social Research (Institutt for samfunnsforskning) said the lure of a good wage was strong for many students, prompting them to leave school to start earning money instead. When job opportunities in the labour market improve by 1 percent, the proportion of high school dropouts increases between 0.1 and 0.4 percent. Conversely, when unemployment rates rise, more young people stay in school.

“We invest in education today to reap the benefits through a better job in the future,” she said. “How long you choose to study partly depends on the opportunities in the labour market. In other words, it’s more expensive to go to school in good times than in bad.”

Von Simson warned young people tended to be short-sighted when deciding to drop out of school, putting too much emphasis on the present and not thinking about how the market could change. “If it is the case that they want to work, it’s maybe a solution to get more practical work into school life,” she said. “Many young people could perhaps think about having a closer connection to working life.”

newsinenglish.no/Emily Woodgate

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  • himynameisjay

    I don’t get the lede. Jobs are becoming scarce, competition fierce and headwinds coming. Otoh Norwegian economic confidence is high but “school drop out rates” buck the trend and signal “prosperous times”. Does this mean that kids rather live off a handout? What gives?

    • Tom Just Olsen

      Still Norway educate for more people beyond tertiary level (university degree) than most countries in Europe. Not the least because such an education is practically free here in Norway.

      Our trade balance – and savings of oil & gas income is so huge that we won’t go under for a few generations ahead. How will that be with the UK and USA?

      We do discuss a lot what to do about all those who are not pulling their weight here in Norway, and what they cost us. But compared to, say, UK were 9 million people are ‘totally outside the economy’ and only some 45% of the total population have a paid job (Norway 52%) – our discussion is on a slightly different level.

      USA: Even worse. It’s a land of beach bums, with only some 43% of the total population working. Compared to Norway, USA’s unemployment is more like 27% (Due to different definition of ‘labour force’).

      • frenk

        Tom. But you do have 20 to 25% of the population on ‘generous’ welfare payments…..your productivity has ‘stagnated’ since 2007….etc.

        • Tom Just Olsen

          It is right that productivity has stagnated, but that is obviously due to ‘more immigrants’ (building industry etc.). There are far less people on welfare here in Norway than in the UK relatively speaking. Far less!
          Still: Norway was raten no 10 among the world’s most competitive economies recently. – Just a few days ago.

      • hydro_2

        The UK economy is fine, Tom (http://www.bbc.com/news/business-27516396). Stop worrying about it. And the UK education system is highly ranked internationally (http://www.bbc.com/news/business-27314075). What’s more, people who go beyond tertiary education in the UK are actually more likely to get well paid jobs in their fields of relative expertise. There are so many more opportunities there. In Norway, people, e.g. with an MSc and/or a PhD, who want to pursue careers in their chosen fields often have to go abroad, especially in scientific fields. Is there a per capita for wasted tertiary education, Tom?

        • Tom Just Olsen

          Your links are broken.

          Regardless, UK economy is in a very bad state (huge trade deficit, huge government budget deficit, growing debt, – hair raising stupid energy strategy etc). The current UK government makes it even worse. It is sad and unfair for most Brits. And it is right out dangerous to ‘the world economy’. David Cameron is protecting a ‘horse race business’ in the City that might come crashing down. On us all.

          But I agree with you on ‘Norwegians with a tertiary education might not find a job in Norway’. We educate more people than we need. That has not been a problem as long as these found work elsewhere. But that has grown difficult with slower world economy.

  • hydro_2

    This makes complete sense. I predict announcements of unprecedented and significant restructures involving many redundancies this year and next. Not just in the private sector; public too. Most Norwegian businesses have appalling margins and have priced themselves out of the domestic market. Norwegian consumers shop abroad whenever they can make a saving. (As do I.) Only window shopping here. As for the youth wanting ‘a piece of the prosperity’, study and work your way up, like most of us had to. Hilarious! Norway will be in the EU a lot sooner than ‘most’ here might like to think. It’s not just the oil industry that becoming ‘unfashionable’. Capitalism is undoubtably cracking at the seams. Oh dear! All that investment not in Norway… Time to wake and be humble? Quietly sell all your overseas gambling interests. Sorry, ‘shares’. And build one of the biggest and most secure buildings in history. Then fill it with precious metals or something!

    • Andy AUえーゆーS

      The oil industry is unfashionable? Don’t be ridiculous.

      • hydro_2

        Ridiculous? You must be linked to Norway’s oil… lots of ignorance and denial there. No doubt you think climate change is a myth, too? That a global campaign against fossil fuels has entered the financial markets is yesterday’s news. The influence it’s having on investor decision making (including significant divesting) is becoming quite profound. I think it is going to be a very big game changer. One we all benefit from, including the Cetacea!

        • Tis_not

          Now that IS funny. Norway’s micro-economy, so very dependant on the oil industry, receiving a game changing influence? At best case, it would be a chance to see exactly how socialism works in a capitalist driven society where the expenditures outweigh the dividends. At worst… well the world will always need more cod.

          Be careful what you wish for, oh ye harbinger of bad-oil news. Statoil did not start out as “stat-solar” or “Stat-wind”.

          • Tom Just Olsen

            Norway is far less dependent on oil than many seem to think. Our trade balance is so huge and we save so much of the oil income that we are well prepared for the day there is no more oil and gas income flowing in.
            Without oil & gas exports income Norway’s trade balance is negative with about 120 – 150 B NOK. That’s peanuts compared to ‘disaster economies’ like Italy, the UK, France etc. – relatively speaking.

            I am not up to date on ‘oil industry related imports’, but it is close to 100 Bn NOK, I am sure. Cutting out oil & gas imports our trade balance will still be ‘close to balancing’. – Like that of Sweden.

            Even if we had an annual trade deficit of 100 bn NOK annually we could run our economy by covering the trade deficit with ‘savings’ (the oil fund) – for 75 years… Probably longer, depending on the interest rate. So, we have the resources and the time to restructure our industry to create new fields of export income.

            Don’t worry, be happy! :)

            • frenk

              Strange you have all this wealth…yet Norway is regarded as a ‘cost cutting culture’….very little of quality or value….

    • frenk

      The taxation levels don’t ‘encourage’ business…and/or consumer spending…..
      I can’t imgaine what it costs to rent a shop of office space here….
      I see what they are charging for hotel rooms…and what you actually get for your money….! I suppose supply and demand play a big part…

      • hydro_2

        And as prices become inflated locally, demand contracts locally; regardless of the product or service.

  • Tom Just Olsen

    ‘Unemployment’ is going down with 9000 people since the previous 3 months period and the ‘number of people at work’ (sysselsatte) has increased with 6000 people. 34.000 more people had a paid job in Norway in 2013 than in 2012.

    http://www.ssb.no/arbeid-og-lonn/statistikker/akumnd/maaned

    Norwegian employees have got a salary increase in the region of 3,3% through the latest trade union/employer negotiations while inflation is at 1,8%.

    http://www.ssb.no/priser-og-prisindekser/statistikker/kpi/maaned

    Even ‘immigration’ has fallen with 15% from 2012 to 2013 – down to around 40.000 – not more than a small Norwegian village – per year.

    http://www.ssb.no/befolkning/statistikker/flytting/aar

    And the weather looks good for the weekend. No small thing here in Norway. While London and Paris will have overcast and rain. Hau hau! it can’t be helped:

    http://www.yr.no/

    Sure, we are optimistic.

  • frenk

    Tom….you have ‘all this wealth’ because of your oil and gas reserves……

    • Tom Just Olsen

      …because we tax the oil & gas reserves. Thatcher gave it all away, didn’t she? – Well, you not got the 5 p tax relief per pint of beer. That’s something…. :)

  • frenk

    ‘King of Spin’……Tom?? Please accept that the Norwegian consumer is ‘scammed’ at every opportunity……

    • Tom Just Olsen

      But I agree with you. But not by ‘farmers and politicians’.

  • Tom Just Olsen

    More and more investors are seeing this coming. Not the least this guy who is in-line with your thoughts on this; Jens Ultveit-Moe. He has sold all his ‘oil related business’ (sell on top, you know) and have ventured into catering – and renewable energy. At a TV program – and in a meeting with the then minister of energy, Borten Moe, he claims that these expensive investment in oil & gas explorations in the arctic – ‘will be crowned with economical disaster’. – A strong message….