German unemployment steady at 5% in February Germany's Federal Labor Agency is reporting that unemployment remained steady in February in the country, despite overall weakness in Europe's largest economy

BERLIN -- Unemployment remained steady in February in Germany, despite overall weakness in Europe's largest economy, the Federal Labor Agency said Friday.

The rate sat at 5%, when adjusted for seasonal factors — the figure used by most economists — where it has been for months. In unadjusted terms, it remained for the second month at 5.3% with a total of 2.395 million people jobless.

Germany's state statistics agency reported two weeks ago that the country saw zero economic growth in the fourth quarter and a mediocre 0.6% increase for the whole year.

The country's troubles are a central problem for the 19-country eurozone economy and the European Central Bank, which is trying to stimulate flagging growth and inflation with negative interest rates and bond purchases with newly printed money.

"Until now, the German labor market has shown a remarkable resistance against external shocks, like global trade conflicts, the manufacturing slump or recently the coronavirus," said ING economist Carsten Brzeski in a research note.

“Strong domestic demand, services and demographics have increased the labor market's immunity. However, successes of the past are no guarantee for the future and underneath the strong headline numbers, there are already some cracks.”