You're reading: German jobless numbers tick up in August

BERLIN — The number of Germans without jobs ticked up in August amid growing signs the European financial crisis is taking its toll on the region's largest economy, the Federal Labor Agency reported Thursday.

Some 29,000 more Germans were out of work in August over July, raising the jobless total to more than 2.9 million. When adjusted for seasonal factors, the number of jobless rose by 9,000.

Both the adjusted and unadjusted unemployment rates remained unchanged at 6.8 percent, the agency said.

Germany has been counting on domestic consumption to help offset weakening exports within the eurozone, where several countries are in recession.

But the new figures raise concerns about consumer spending, said Carsten Brzeski, an economist with ING in Brussels, who noted that the rise in jobless was the highest August increase since 1993.

“The strong labor market has been one of the main drivers of German growth in the first half of the year,” he said in a research note. “Looking ahead, however, it is doubtful whether private consumption can really take over the baton as main growth driver for the German economy — today’s numbers provide further evidence that the labor market is gradually losing steam.”

Economists have been warning that the debt crisis in the 17-country eurozone could eventually catch up with Germany. The country’s economy has over the past few years done better than the currency union as a whole, which is struggling with a crisis over too much government debt and recessions in several countries.

Following two years of strong economic growth, the German economy grew by only 0.3 percent in the second quarter. Still, unemployment remains low, in sharp contrast with rates of more than 20 percent in Spain and Greece, which are both in recessions.