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German workers on short-time down 35% in August - Ifo

Employees work at a factory run by PIKO, a model railway manufacturer, in the eastern German town of Sonneberg

BERLIN (Reuters) - The number of employees put on reduced working hours in job protection schemes in Germany fell by 35% in August, the economic institute Ifo said on Friday, as recovery in Europe's largest economy continues.

The number of people on the short-time work scheme, also known as Kurzarbeit, fell to 688,000 in August, down from 1.06 million in July, the Munich-based institute said.

"This is the first time since the start of the coronavirus crisis that the number of people on short-time work has been below one million," Ifo survey expert Stefan Sauer said.

Ifo said nearly all sectors of the economy reported a decline in August. The hospitality industry, one of the most hit by COVID-19 lockdown, was also recovering but still had 10% of its employees on shorter hours, it added.

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Earlier this week, the Labour Office said the number of people out of work fell by 53,000 in seasonally adjusted terms to 2.538 million.

The seasonally-adjusted jobless rate fell to 5.5%, the lowest since March 2020, when Germany entered its first coronavirus lockdown.

(Reporting by Riham Alkousaa; Editing by Andrew Heavens)