Job vacancies show growing labour shortage: CFIB

By Staff | March 13, 2018 | Last updated on September 15, 2023
1 min read

Job vacancies reached a new high in Q4 2017, totalling 399,000 jobs left unfilled in Canada’s private sector, according to a CFIB report.

The job vacancy rate—the proportion of unfilled jobs relative to all available jobs in the private sector—reached 3%, compared to 2.4% for Q4 2016.

Read: Big banks’ forecasts for growth, rate hikes

“Labour shortages are a growing problem. This is the second consecutive quarter in which the job vacancy rate has surpassed the high recorded at the beginning of 2008, before the recession,” said Ted Mallett, vice-president and chief economist at CFIB, in a release.

Results by province

British Columbia, which already had the tightest labour market, experienced the largest jump (+ 0.3 points) of all the provinces, with a vacancy rate of 3.9% in Q4 2017. Quebec, Ontario, New Brunswick, Alberta and Manitoba saw a more modest 0.1 point increase.

Provinces

Vacancy rate

Unfilled jobs

British Columbia

3.9%

69,500

Quebec

3.4%

94,700

Ontario

3.2%

164,000

New Brunswick

2.7%

6,300

Alberta

2.4%

37,600

Manitoba

2.3%

9,900

Saskatchewan

2.3%

7,700

Nova Scotia

2.0%

6,000

Newfoundland and Labrador

1.8%

2,800

Prince Edward Island

1.6%

700

Job vacancies by industry

The job vacancy rate rose in eight out of 14 industry sectors in Q4 2017, with the most significant increases occurring in the personal services, information, arts/recreation and retail sectors.

Read: Growth in part-time work behind February jobs gains

Labour shortages continue to put upward pressure on wages, with companies having unfilled jobs expecting to offer an average wage increase that is 0.5% higher than those businesses without such vacancies, finds the report.

Read the report here.

Advisor.ca staff

Staff

The staff of Advisor.ca have been covering news for financial advisors since 1998.