Share of unemployed who are women rises to 53.5%

Thursday, 26 February 2026AI summary
Share of unemployed who are women rises to 53.5%
Photo: Correio da Manhã

A CGTP study reported that women now make up 53.5% of the total unemployed in 2025, up from 52.6% the previous year. The increase points to persistent gender differences in the labour market and may influence calls for targeted employment and training policies. Jobseekers and those using employment services should monitor local programmes aimed at reducing gender gaps.

Context & Explainers

What is CGTP?

The General Confederation of the Portuguese Workers (CGTP – Confederação Geral dos Trabalhadores Portugueses) is Portugal’s largest trade-union confederation, grouping most unions in manufacturing, public services and many other sectors.

Founded clandestinely in 1970 as “Intersindical” under the dictatorship, it emerged publicly after the 1974 Carnation Revolution and was legalised in 1975. It has been central to virtually all major labour struggles since then, from defending collective bargaining and the 40‑hour week to leading general strikes against austerity and labour‑law rollbacks.

CGTP is historically close to the Portuguese Communist Party and has a class‑struggle, anti‑neoliberal profile, strongly critical of EU and government policies seen as undermining workers’ rights. It favours grassroots mobilisation and strikes over compromise, often refusing national social‑pact deals that the more centrist UGT is willing to sign.

In today’s Portugal, CGTP remains a key actor in wage bargaining, labour‑law debates and national protests; together with UGT it called the first joint general strike in years in December 2025, signalling its continuing capacity to organise mass action.

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