Unemployment numbers in France rose by 43,000 in January to 3.16 million, an increase of 10.7 percent from last year, the labour ministry revealed on Tuesday. The figure is at its highest since January 1997, when it reached 3.19 million.

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The number of registered French unemployed rose by 43,000 in January to 3.16 million, the labour ministry said Tuesday, to just shy of a 16-year record.

The ministry said the number of registered unemployed rose by 10.7 percent from last year.

Unemployment in the eurozone's second largest economy hit its modern day record of 3.19 million reached in January 1997.

Rising unemployment is a setback for Socialist President Francois Hollande, who has pledged to curb the unemployment rate from the current level of more than 10 percent to a single-digit figure by December.

But mounting economic problems have already forced Hollande to abandon a goal to reduce the fiscal deficit to 3 percent in line with European Union norms after slashing this year's growth forecast.

His government is struggling with weak growth, poor competitiveness, thousands of layoffs and general economic gloom.

Hollande has however rejected undertaking massive additional austerity measures this year, arguing they would only slow growth and further aggravate the country's finances.

(AFP)

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