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Canada Just Lost 17,700 Jobs In April. Full-Time Work Took The Hit.

Published May 8, 2026
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Summary:
  • Canada's unemployment rate rose to 6.9% in April, a six-month high.
  • Full-time jobs fell by 46,700, partly offset by 29,000 part-time gains.
  • The country has lost 112,000 jobs since the start of 2026.

Canada's job market shrank by 17,700 in April. That sounds bad on its own, and the full picture is worse, since full-time work fell by 46,700 jobs.

A part-time hiring spike of 29,000 was the only thing that kept the headline from looking ugly. The jobless rate climbed to 6.9%, its highest level in six months.

Markets had braced for soft hiring, but not this soft. Economists had forecast a 15,000 job gain and a 6.7% jobless rate.

Where The Damage Is

The goods-making sector lost 26,800 jobs in April. That covers factories, builders, and other firms most exposed to U.S. tariffs.

Services held up better, adding 9,100 jobs, mostly in health care and business services.

Wages also cooled. Hourly pay for full-time workers rose 4.8% from a year ago, down from 5.1% in March.

Why that matters: The Bank of Canada watches that wage number closely, since cooling wage growth tends to ease the bank's worry about rising prices.

For investors, that gives the bank more room to cut interest rates if the slowdown keeps going.

April's drop also pulls Canada away from its 2025 trend, when the country added 67,000 jobs over the year.

Young Workers Are Hit Hardest

The unemployment rate for Canadians ages 15 to 24 now sits at 14.3%, while core working-age unemployment for those 25 to 54 is at 6%.

This isn't a one-month blip. Canada has lost jobs in three of the four months in 2026, with 111,000 of the losses coming from full-time work.

The participation rate edged up to 65% from 64.9% in March. That means more Canadians are looking for work, even as fewer are landing full-time roles.

Think of full-time hiring as the engine and part-time hiring as the spare tire. The engine has stalled, and the spare is keeping things moving for now.

That mix tends to show up in slower spending later, since part-time roles pay less and offer fewer hours than the full-time jobs they replaced.

The Trade War Backdrop

U.S. tariffs and trade fears have weighed on Canada's economy for over a year, and higher prices from the Iran war haven't helped.

The Bank of Canada held its key rate at 2.25% on April 29, while warning that future moves are getting harder to call.

The bank's last Monetary Policy Report pointed to slack in the labour market, even though layoffs have stayed modest.

CIBC economist Andrew Grantham called 2026 a rocky start for the labour market. Indeed Canada's Brendon Bernard added that tough conditions for young job seekers and the long-term unemployed are likely to last.

For investors with Canadian exposure, the trend in full-time work matters more than the headline jobless rate, since full-time jobs drive most of the spending and tax base.

What To Watch

The bank's next rate decision lands on June 10, and Friday's softer print gives it more reason to weigh a cut.

With full-time work clearly fading and wage growth slowing, the Bank of Canada has more room to act if the slowdown sticks.

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