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Marginal rise in US employment in November
By David Walsh
6 December 2003
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The US jobs picture improved slightly in November, as the jobless
rate slipped from 6 to 5.9 percent, the lowest level since March.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) figures, released Friday,
showed that employment rose by 57,000 over October. Since July,
328,000 jobs have been added in the US.
The BLS report, which described the unemployment rate and number
of unemployed persons (8.7 million) as essentially unchanged
and down slightly from midyear, came as a disappointment
to analysts. In the days leading up to the release of the November
figures, economists had predicted an increase of 120,000 to 150,000
jobs, while some on Wall Street had forecast a growth of 200,000
or more. The stock market declined Friday morning on the news.
Another 17,000 factory jobs were lost last month, 3,000 more
than in October, making November the 39th month in a row in which
manufacturing employment declined, although the rate has slowed
considerably. Retail trade employment fell in November, primarily
due to the grocery store strikes in California and elsewhere.
Employment in professional and business services showed little
change; the sector has picked up 181,000 jobs since December 2002,
three-quarters of which is accounted for by temporary help services.
Construction employment gained; the industry has added 156,000
jobs since February.
In November, 2 million unemployed people had been looking for
work for half a year or longer, approximately the same number
as in October. They represented nearly a quarter of the total
jobless. This remains the highest level of long-term joblessness
in two decades. The average duration of unemployment was 20.1
weeks, also the most in nearly 20 years.
Stephanie Weiss of US Bancorp Asset Management told Reuters
that the disappointing job figure took everyone a little
by surprise, especially after such positive economic data leading
up to it. The employment picture is not improving
as fast as we thought it was, David Wyss of Standard and
Poors told the Associated Press. Its
true weve had four consecutive months of payroll growth,
which is a start. But its only a bare start.
Joseph Rebello and Phil McCarty note on SmartMoney.com,
Over the last three years, employers have cut more than
three million private-sector jobs. To replace those jobs within
a year and keep up with population growth, employers would need
to create at least 400,000 jobs a month, said Ed McKelvey, an
economist with Goldman Sachs & Co. (GS) in New York. That
far exceeds the average of the late-1990s economic boom.
On CNBC William Sullivan, a senior economist at Morgan Stanley,
remarked, We are in the 24th month of the alleged recovery
process, and we are still dealing with substandard jobs growth.
Three-quarters of a million jobs have been cut since the official
end of the recession in November 2001.
The jobless figures indicate that the current economic upturn
has a quite peculiar character. The Economist, in an article
headlined The not-so-quite-jobless recovery, observes
that there is normally a lag between the end of a recession and
the decision by employers to begin hiring. But in most recoveries,
this hesitation lasts only about three months. This time round
... it lasted a year and a half. The recovery remains way behind
schedule. If it had followed the course of most post-war cycles,
8m Americans would have been added to the payrolls by now.
Allan Clark points out in the North County Times that
the US economy has only suffered a net loss of jobs two years
in a row twice since 1940 (in 1957-58 and 1981-82), adding: President
George W. Bush has seen job losses in 26 of his 34 months in office
and is heading for a third year of net lossesthe first time
since the Great Depression. The loss so far in President Bushs
first term adds up to 2,564,000 jobs.
According to Challenger & Gray, the job placement firm,
planned layoffs at US firms fell in November to 99,452 from 171,874
in October. The telecommunications sector led with 18,183 announced
cuts. Chief executive officer John Challenger said, Job-cut
announcements have been on a roller coaster ride this year. One
month job cuts increase; the next, they fall. The lack of any
discernible trend in corporate downsizing is indicative of the
uncertainty associated with the current economy.
Numerous studies indicate that many of the several million
jobs, particularly the factory jobs, lost in the past three years
are permanently gone. Erica L. Groshen and Simon Potter of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, in their study Has Structural
Change Contributed to a Jobless Recovery? suggest that 79
percent of employees who have lost their jobs in the recent recession
(and recovery) worked in industries more affected by structural
shifts than by cyclical shifts. Job losses that stem from
structural changes are permanent: as industries decline, jobs
are eliminated, compelling workers to switch industries, sectors,
locations, or skills in order to find a new job, they write.
Another side to the slow increase in employment despite the
upturn in output has been the extraordinary growth in labor productivity,
i.e., the extent to which US firms are driving their employees
to work harder. The US Labor Department announced December 3 that
employee production per hour during the third quarter rose at
an annualized rate of 9.4 percent, the highest in two decades.
The Economist notes, IT visionaries are out. Parsimony
is in. Firms have squeezed out productivity gains by working their
men and machines harder and controlling their costs better. These
gains may not be sustainable, if workers and machines are working
at a pitch they cannot maintain for long. Stephen Stanley
of RBS Greenwich Capital told the Washington Post, You
can only do that [increase productivity] for so long before you
exhaust your workers. Average manufacturing overtime increased
in November to 4.4 hours and the workweek to 40.8 hours.
Sullivan of Morgan Stanley commented, The downside of
the productivity miracle is that there is less pressure on employers
to hire. Employers are making every effort to increase production
without engaging new workers, resulting in a 14-month high in
the average workweek. The increase in hours, according to Lehman
Brothers analyst Drew Matus, is the equivalent of adding
350,000 additional jobs.
At the same time as productivity is soaring, workers
wages are seeing next to no improvement. Average hourly earnings
rose 0.1 percent in November to $15.46. Hourly earnings over the
last 12 months are up only 2.1 percent, the slowest annual growth
in 16 years.
Major firms continue to report job cuts and layoffs. Some of
the most recent include:
* Sprint, the fourth largest long-distance
telephone company in the US, announced plans November 24 to eliminate
about 2,000 jobs, or about 3 percent of its workforce, as part
of a restructuring plan.
* Drug manufacturer Schering-Plough of Trenton,
New Jersey, reported December 4 that it would also cut 2,000 jobs,
on top of the 1,000 announced last August. The 3,000 positions
represent some 10 percent of the companys staff. The firm
has slipped from the eleventh to thirteenth in US pharmaceutical
sales.
* Office equipment maker Xerox will
cut 800 jobs in the US under previously announced restructuring
plans. Two hundred jobs will be lost in the Rochester, New York
area. After the cuts, Xeroxs workforce will be reduced to
62,000, down 15,000 in recent years.
* Autodesk, a provider of computer-aided design
software, announced November 25 that it would eliminate 550 to
650 jobs, or 17 percent of its workforce. Most of the job cuts
will come in the administrative and marketing areas.
* Mitsubishi Motors North America is planning
to lay off 425 workers at its central Illinois assembly plant
next year because of a deep sales slump. The layoffs, the first
at the plant since 1999, will affect 350 unionized employees and
as many as 75 nonunion staff.
* Boeing issued 60-day layoff notices November
21 to about 340 employees, mostly in the Puget Sound, Washington
area, indicating that job cuts at the aerospace giant may continue
into 2004. By the end of this year Boeing will have reduced its
workforce by about 40,000 since December 2001.
* GE Medical Systems, a medical device conglomerate
and a division of General Electric, is planning to eliminate 140
jobs at its Louisville, Colorado plant and send the work to Mexico
and Finland. The jobs are going to existing plants in Juarez,
Mexico and Helsinki. The company has 32,000 employees in 34 countries.
See Also:
More telecommunications
jobs eliminated
US: 21,000 Verizon workers accept buyout
[20 November 2003]
US: Job cuts mount amid signs
of upturn
[8 November 2003]
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