Unemployment in the euro zone remained stuck at its record high of 12.1 percent in November, while retail sales rebounded over the month, rising at their fastest pace in 12 years.
The headline unemployment rate was in line with economists' expectations, and has been stuck at 12.1 percent for eight straight months following revised figures.
The figures paint an even more gloomy for those under the age of 25, with youth unemployment rising by 2,000 to 3.575 million in the euro zone. The rate increased to 36.8 percent in Portugal, 41.6 percent in Italy and a massive 57.7 percent in Spain.
Dominique Faget | AFP | Getty Images
The divergent picture across different regions continued with headline rates of unemployment. In the periphery, Portugal and Ireland's unemployment both fell; Spain and France's rates held steady, but Italy's increased to 12.7 percent — the highest since records began in 1977.
(Read more: Euro zone economic recovery gathers steam)
Despite this high joblessness, however, consumer demand surged ahead in November. Separate data also released Wednesday revealed that retail sales across the euro zone rose by 1.4 percent in November from the previous month.
This marked their strongest monthly rise since November 2001, with both core and peripheral countries seeing a sharp increase in sales.
James Howat, European economist at Capital Economics, said November's euro zone unemployment data indicated that the region's labor market downturn was starting to ease.
"Looking forward, survey measures of employment intentions suggest that euro-zone employment might start expanding again over the coming quarters, albeit at a slow pace," he said in a note.
(Read more: Deflation fears return as euro zone inflation slips)
"November's rise in euro-zone retail sales also provided evidence that pressure on households is slowly easing. Overall, the outlook is starting to brighten a little for euro-zone consumers."