No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveManpower Employment Survey: Positive Prognosis on Jobs

Manpower Employment Survey: Positive Prognosis on Jobs

Another indication of economic recovery was reported this week when the international employment agency Manpower announced that 28 percent of Costa Rican employers expect to hire more workers in the second quarter of 2010.

Meanwhile, 66 percent of the employers interviewed said they do not expect a change in employee numbers. Only 5 percent said they expect the number of their workers to decrease.

Conducting a survey of 620 national businesses, representatives of Manpower asked members of each company this question: “How do you foresee labor numbers in your organization changing over the next quarter (April-June 2010), compared with the current quarter?”

Overall, the “Net Employment Outlook” – which Manpower defines as the percentage of employers who expect to increase the number of jobs, minus the percentage who project a decrease – for the upcoming quarter was +23 percent. That represents a 20 percent increase over the +3 percent increase projected for the second quarter of 2009.

The survey was conducted in six regions of the country – Alajuela, Cartago,  Guanacaste, Heredia, Puntarenas/Limón and San José. Of the regions surveyed, employers in Cartago and Heredia expressed the most optimism, as 30 percent and 28 percent, respectively, predicted increases in jobs in the upcoming quarter. Guanacaste had the lowest regional projection of job growth, at 11 percent. Employers across all regions predicted job growth to be at least 16 percent higher in the next quarter than they had projected for the second quarter of 2009.

“Costa Rican employers are starting to recover to the level of hiring that was reported before the financial crisis, with almost three out of every 10 employers anticipating that there will be increases in their staffs,” said Alicia del Río, manager of Manpower Costa Rica. “The numbers are expected to improve over the next quarter, which indicates that people looking for jobs will have better opportunities to find positions in all the regions and in practically all of the sectors surveyed in Costa Rica.”

–Adam Williams

Trending Now

Costa Rica-Amsterdam Air Link Grows with KLM’s Five Weekly Flights

KLM Royal Dutch Airlines has committed to year-round flights between Amsterdam and San José for 2026, adding five weekly services that promise to draw...

Costa Rica’s Route 32 Shutdown Drags On Amid Weather Delays

Drivers on Route 32 face more uncertainty today as the Ministry of Public Works and Transportation (MOPT) holds off on announcing when the key...

Is Your Costa Rica Trip Safe from U.S. Airport Chaos?

Travelers in Costa Rica can breathe easier as local airports report normal operations despite the chaos gripping air travel in the United States. The...

Costa Rica Aims for First Place vs Haiti in World Cup Qualifying Showdown

Costa Rica's quest for a place at the 2026 World Cup heats up on Thursday, when they face Haiti. La Sele currently sits in...

Rodrigo Paz Takes Office in Bolivia, Restores U.S. Ties

The center-right Rodrigo Paz was sworn in Saturday as president of Bolivia with a promise that the country would “never again” be “isolated” from...

Costa Rica vs Haiti in Curacao, Then Honduras in San Jose

Our national soccer team faces a defining week in their push for the 2026 World Cup, starting with a matchup against Haiti in Curacao...
Avatar
spot_img
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica