In Poland, the registered unemployment rate was 5%. at the end of June this year at 5.1 percent. a month earlier.
The Central Bureau of Statistics (GUS) announced this on Tuesday.
In June 2022, the recorded unemployment rate was 5.2 percent.
New statistics
At the end of June 2023, the number of registered unemployed was 783.5 thousand. against 802.3 thousand. a month earlier. According to the estimates of the Ministry of Family and Social Policy, the registered unemployment rate fell to 5%. at the end of June this year at 5.1 percent. at the end of the previous month.
The number of newly registered unemployed was 91.4 thousand. in June 2023 against 93.6 thousand. a month earlier, the Central Bureau of Statistics reported. According to the statistics of the Central Bureau of Statistics, the number of newly registered unemployed amounted to 93.6 thousand a year ago.
Industrial orders
Meanwhile, new factory orders fell 5.1 percent. year after year in June. On a monthly basis, there was an increase of 0.1 percent. Exports and export orders fell 3.4% in June. year-on-year and fell by 0.3 percent. monthly.
“The value of new orders received in June this year by industrial processing companies surveyed was 5.1% lower than in the corresponding month of last year, including export orders were down 3.4% (against a significant increase in new orders overall and for exports a year ago). Significantly lower than in June last year, new orders, among others from companies specializing in the production of machinery and equipment, chemicals and chemical products, metals and paper and paper products (drops of about 8% to about 20%), while the value of new orders increased year over year, including in the production of motor vehicles, trailers and semi-trailers (by about 15%) and metal products (by about 13%),” the press release reads.
Source: Do Rzeczy

Roy Brown is a renowned economist and author at The Nation View. He has a deep understanding of the global economy and its intricacies. He writes about a wide range of economic topics, including monetary policy, fiscal policy, international trade, and labor markets.