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Friday, 30.03.2007.

11:19

693,000 unemployed in Serbia

There were 693,000 unemployed in Serbia at the end of 2006, with an unemployment rate at 21.6 percent, the World Bank says.

Izvor: FoNet

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Canadian

pre 17 godina

"Serbia must address high unemployment rates by strengthening the private sector so as to provide fresh jobs."

Could be a Trojan Horse for large established corporate interests to come in and dominate the labour market. Hopefully more Serbia entreprenuers will show their faces and successful Serbs from the diaspora might create new private ventures.

Still the figures are not that bad, a 21% rate is only about twice as much as Germany's current level, the so-called "economic engine of Europe." Remember their huge figures after the integration of the East. The Serbian growth rate of 6% is sizzling so this will likely be temporary, especially once things settle down after Kosovo is sorted out.

Canadian

pre 17 godina

"Serbia must address high unemployment rates by strengthening the private sector so as to provide fresh jobs."

Could be a Trojan Horse for large established corporate interests to come in and dominate the labour market. Hopefully more Serbia entreprenuers will show their faces and successful Serbs from the diaspora might create new private ventures.

Still the figures are not that bad, a 21% rate is only about twice as much as Germany's current level, the so-called "economic engine of Europe." Remember their huge figures after the integration of the East. The Serbian growth rate of 6% is sizzling so this will likely be temporary, especially once things settle down after Kosovo is sorted out.

Canadian

pre 17 godina

"Serbia must address high unemployment rates by strengthening the private sector so as to provide fresh jobs."

Could be a Trojan Horse for large established corporate interests to come in and dominate the labour market. Hopefully more Serbia entreprenuers will show their faces and successful Serbs from the diaspora might create new private ventures.

Still the figures are not that bad, a 21% rate is only about twice as much as Germany's current level, the so-called "economic engine of Europe." Remember their huge figures after the integration of the East. The Serbian growth rate of 6% is sizzling so this will likely be temporary, especially once things settle down after Kosovo is sorted out.