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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US: 101,000 jobs lost in December
By David Walsh
11 January 2003
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The US economy continued to hemorrhage jobs in December, as
the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported January 10 that
employment declined by 101,000 during the month. While the official
unemployment rate remained at 6 percent, analysts had predicted
a growth of 20,000 to 30,000 jobs and were surprised by the figures.
US bond prices jumped on the report and the dollar sank to a three-year
low against the euro.
The employment loss was the largest single-month total since
February 2002, when 165,000 jobs were slashed. The BLS revised
its latest report to show a decline of 88,000 jobs cut in November,
as opposed to the 40,000 initially reported. The US economy eliminated
185,000 jobs in 2002 as a whole.
In December manufacturing jobs dropped by 65,000. The bulk
of the losses in recent months have come in durable goods production,
the BLS reports, particularly in the electrical equipment, fabricated
metals, industrial machinery and transportation equipment industries.
There were sizable losses last month in rubber and plastics and
in printing and publishing. For 2002 as a whole some 600,000 jobs
in manufacturing were destroyed. (The Commerce Department reported
January 7 that factory orders dropped 0.8 percent in November,
marking the third such decrease in four months.)
Retail trade employment suffered a sharp decline in December,
as many retailers hired fewer workers than usual. The largest
drop occurred in restaurants and drinking establishments, but
there were also significant declines in food stores, auto dealerships,
general merchandise stores and miscellaneous retail (such as toy
stores). Employment in retail trade fell by 173,000 jobs in 2002.
Other industries experiencing substantial job losses included
the transportation and communications industries, the latter losing
100,000 jobs in 2002.
The international outplacement firm Challenger, Gray &
Christmas, which tracks corporate downsizing, reported January
6 that US companies announced plans to cut 93,000 jobs in December,
down from Novembers 158,000. Challenger reported that more
than 1.5 million layoffs were announced in 2002, down from the
2 million in 2001, but still the second highest total on record.
John A. Challenger, chief executive officer, observed, The
drop below 100,000 in December is not much to celebrate nor it
is an indication of a downward trend. To put it in perspective,
in 1998, the heaviest job-cut year prior to 2001, the monthly
average was 56,483. High-tech industries (telecom, computer,
electronics and e-commerce) combined for more than 450,000 job
cuts in 2002, or some one-third of the total.
Particularly revealing is the surge in long-term unemployment,
under conditions where an ever smaller percentage of the jobless
population is eligible for benefits. Commentators note that there
are now more long-term unemployedindividuals out of work
for more than six monthsthan there were in 1991, during
the last recession. A spokesman for the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities told the Christian Science Monitor, I
think you have to measure the severity of a recession not by the
level of unemployment, but by the level of increase. If you measure
this recession by the change in unemployment, its been as
great as in the early 1990s, and if you measure the long-term
unemployed, its been even worse.
The unemployment figures come on the heels of reports showing
that retail sales this holiday season in the US were the worst
since 1970, when figures on same-store sales (the
most reliable figure, indicating sales from stores opened at least
a year) were first collected. Even the strongest retailers, Wal-Mart,
Kohls and Target, suffered from weak consumer spending. Same-store
sales for November and December combined, which account for 25
percent of retailers annual revenues, rose only a dismal
0.5 percent. A retail analyst with Northern Trust told Reuters,
Recent consumer confidence data, job fears, and ongoing
geopolitical unrest do not bode well for an acceleration in spending
in early 2003.
The New York-based Conference Board announced December 31 that
consumer confidence fell sharply and unexpectedly in December,
for the sixth time in seven months. The groups Consumer
Confidence Index dropped to 80.3 from a revised 84.9 in November.
Analysts blamed the drop on an abysmal holiday shopping
season, the increased likelihood of a US-led war against Iraq
and higher prices for gasoline and heating oil ( Associated
Press).
The Conference Board reported a particularly grim outlook for
jobs, with 20.2 percent of consumers saying they expect fewer
jobs to open up in the next six months. Only 18.7 percent of consumers
anticipate a rise in their incomes and the number rating current
conditions good fell to 14.6 percent. Raghavan Mayur
of TIPP, a unit of TechnoMetrica Market Intelligence, told the
Christian Science Monitor, More than 20 percent are
concerned that a household member may lose a job. Consumer confidence
is the weakest, in December, of the past 25 months of polling.
The Federal Reserve reported January 8 that consumer debt fell
by $2.2 billion in November, the first time since January 1998
that credit had declined and the biggest drop since October 1991.
The report fueled fears that consumer spending, the main
driver of the US economy, may be faltering, according to
Reuters.
In another indication of a slowing economy and genuine economic
distress, the Mortgage Bankers Association of America revealed
January 7 that a record level of mortgage holders lost their homes
to foreclosure in the third quarter of 2002. The Association attributed
the record to job losses which squeezed more mortgage
holders out of their homes. Loans in the process of foreclosure
grew to 1.15 percent of mortgages, surpassing the previous high
set in 1999.
Adding to the generally bleak economic picture, 43 percent
of corporate earnings preannouncements through January 7 warned
of worse-than-expected results, with only 26 percent forecasting
a better-than-expected period. James Paulsen, chief investment
officer at Wells Capital Management, told a reporter, Having
had such a tremendous downward revision of third-quarter estimates
and now seeing some of that happening in the fourth quarter as
well is being met with more disappointment.
Corporations announcing plans to cut jobs in recent weeks include:
Alcoa the Pittsburgh-based aluminum
giant reported January 8 that it would slash 8,000 jobs in a weak
market. The worlds largest aluminum producer suffered a
net loss of $223 million in the fourth quarter of 2002. Alcoa
chief executive Alan Belda declared in a statement, Global
manufacturing weakness has persisted longer than we anticipated.
He noted that aerospace, industrial gas turbine and telecommunications
markets remained soft. The job cuts amount to about 6 percent
of Alcoas global workforce.
AT&T the telecommunications firm
announced January 6 plans to cut about 3,500 jobs as a result
of continuing wars in the long-distance communications industry.
AT&T is number one in the industry. After selling its cable
television business to Comcast last year, the company began 2003
with some 75,000 employees. AT&T has announced 10,000 layoffs
over the past two years.
United Airlines the struggling air carrier,
based in Chicago, revealed January 3 that it was laying off nearly
1,700 white-collar and ticketing employees, or about 2 percent
of its workforce. United, which filed for bankruptcy protection
December 9, said it was closing its remaining 32 city ticket offices
based on research showing that more customers are buying tickets
online or calling Uniteds reservation number. The bulk of
the layoffs involve nearly 1,500 management and salaried employees
whose nonunion positions will be cut by January 19.
American Airlines the Fort Worth, Texas-based
airline, the worlds largest carrier, has notified Texas
state officials that it plans to lay off 415 workers in mid-January.
The elimination of the clerks and agents was attributed to severe
economic conditions in the airline industry. American has
112,000 workers, but needs fewer of them because it is cutting
back on the number of flights. By March American will have 18.6
percent less passenger capacity than in March 2001. In August
the carrier announced 7,000 layoffs; in December it asked employees
to forego raises they are due in 2003.
Kmart according to the January 10 Detroit
Free Press, the Troy, Michigan-based retailer is preparing
to shut another 300 stores, resulting in an undisclosed number
of job losses. Kmart filed the largest retail bankruptcy in history
last January 22. In a first round of closures the company shut
283 stores and laid off 22,000 workers. Kmart has lost $2 billion
since its reorganization plan was announced. Russell Barnett of
the retail services group at Grubb & Ellis predicted that
the company would not survive. Its safe to assume
that their remaining assets will either be acquired by a competitor
or sold off piecemeal. The numbers have been horrific.
Kemet the electronics parts maker announced
January 6 that it would close two plants in South Carolina, eliminating
280 jobs. The firm makes components used in cellular phones, computers,
airplanes and military equipment. A company spokesman said the
job cuts were due to a glut of electronic parts.
Art Technology Group the Internet software
developer, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, reported January
6 plans to cut about 20 percent of its staff, or 115 people as
part of a corporate restructuring.
Tasty Baking the maker of the Tastykake
brand of snacks has closed its 12 stores in Pennsylvania, New
Jersey and Maryland and several top executives have left the company,
including its chairman. The stores employed about 50 people. Chief
executive Charles Pizzi told the press, What were
saying is that this is no longer business as usual.
See Also:
Unions accept massive cutbacks at US Airways
[6 January 2003]
US unemployment surges
in November
[7 December 2002]
US home foreclosures
hit highest level in 30 years
[7 December 2002]
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