According to the latest poll conducted by Croatia's Bureau of Statistics about the labour force in the first quarter of 2007, those who sought jobs from seven to 12 months made up 14.8 percent of job-seekers in the first three months this year.
A group of those being unemployed for a continuous period between four and six months made up 14.5 percent.
In the said period, 13.2 percent of job-seekers waited for employment from one to three months.
Then, the unemployed for a continuous period between 13 and 24 months accounted for 11.7 percent of the surveyed unemployed.
Those who found jobs within one month's time made up 2.1 percent of job-seekers.
Another survey about unemployment shows that 72.2 percent of jobless sought permanent jobs, with 23.7 percent saying that it was all the same to them whether they would be given temporary or permanent jobs.
According to that survey, 15.5 surveyed unemployed Croats say they will move to another nearby town or residential areas in neighbouring counties if they get jobs there.
Besides, 2.8 percent of the surveyed unemployed Croats they will be prepared to move abroad if they are offered jobs in foreign countries.
Nearly two thirds of the jobless would accept additional training for employment.
Of those jobless, who surveyed in the second half of 2006, 39.7 percent said they would accept a minimum wage between 2,000 and 3,000 kuna, and 54.8 percent said they expected minimum wagers to be higher than 3,000 kuna upon their employment.