Unemployment fell slightly in June to 5.3 per cent but the coronavirus pandemic continued to hit the labour market, new data from the Central Statistics Office showed.
The rate could be as high as 22.5 per cent if those claiming the pandemic payment were included in the data.
Seasonally adjusted figures showed a total of 131,200 were considered unemployed during June, compared to 137,800 a month earlier. However, the figure was 7,000 higher than in June 2019, when 124,200 people were classed as unemployed.
For men, the unemployment rate was 5.2 per cent, with 5.4 per cent for women. The rate was also higher for those under the age of 25, with a 12.8 per cent rate, while those aged 25 and over saw a rate of 4.2 per cent.
Pandemic payment
When those in receipt of the pandemic unemployment payment – who do not meet the agreed criteria to be considered unemployed – were included in the figures, the unemployment rate soared to 22.5 per cent. That showed a rate of 21.8 per cent for men and 23.5 per cent for women in June 2020.
The rate of unemployment in those aged 15 to 24 was far higher, at 45.4 per cent, while those aged 25 and over had a rate of 19.2 per cent.
Figures from the last week of May showed 543,164 people were in receipt of the pandemic unemployment payment. More than 400,000 people have benefitted from the wage subsidy scheme.
As Ireland has begun slowly reopening, those figures have fallen. Last week, 465,900 people claimed the weekly Covid-19 pandemic unemployment payment.