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Amid official predictions of recovery
US jobless rate soared in June
By Bill Vann
8 July 2003
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The unexpectedly steep climb in the US unemployment rate announced
by the Labor Department last week sent Wall Street into a tailspin
and opened up a fresh crisis for the Bush administration, which
has been predicting an economic upturn fueled by its policy of
tax cuts for the rich.
The official jobless rate climbed by 0.3 percentage points
to hit 6.4 percent for the month of June. The increase was three
times as severe as the one predicted by most analysts, who expected
a moderate rise from 6.1 to 6.2 percent. The increase was the
worst since the one posted in the wake of the September 11, 2001
terrorist attacks.
The Labor Departments Bureau of Labor Statistics indicated
that the total of unemployed (those who have searched for work
in the past month) plus discouraged workers (those
who have stopped looking after failing to find a job), all
other marginally attached workers (those who are available
for work but have not searched for a job in the past month) and
those who want full-time jobs but can only find part-time work
amounts to 10.6 percent of the US workforce, or approximately
15 million workers.
For 16 to 19 year-olds, the overall rate hit 19.3 percentup
from 18.5 percent in Mayas millions graduated from high
school and college to the unemployment lines. For black youth
of that age group, the unemployment rate stood at a seasonally
adjusted rate of nearly 40 percent.
The attempt by these graduates and other workers to find employment
contributed to the rising jobless rate. According to the Labor
Departments report, some 600,000 people sought to join the
workforce last month, but only 250,000 of them were able to find
jobs.
Administration officials attempted to put a positive spin on
this aspect of the figures, asserting that it was a sign of renewed
confidence in the economy that more people were looking for work.
Many analysts dismissed such self-serving claims. Regardless
of the reasons, there arent enough jobs, Bill Cheney,
chief economist for John Hancock Financial Services, told the
Washington Post. Many more people are now looking
for work, perhaps because confidence is recovering, perhaps because
its summer, or perhaps because their unemployment benefits
have run out.
Indeed, rather than rising confidence, the surge into the labor
market reflects in large part deepening desperation on the part
of the growing number of long-term unemployed, who have seen their
benefits exhausted. The number of long-term unemployed has climbed
to 2 million, up 410,000 from a year ago. The Labor Department
defines the long-term unemployed as those out of work for 27 weeks.
The latest unemployment numbers are the worst since Bush was
installed in the White House and higher than at any time since
1994. Since the administration took office in January 2001, an
estimated 2.7 million jobs have been lost, nearly 400,000 of them
since the beginning of this year alone. For the first time in
a decade, the total number of workers officially listed as jobless
has climbed past the 9 million mark.
These numbers say the underlying economy is still weak,
said an analyst for Merrill Lynch. The Wall Street finance house
indicated that it may revise its economic growth forecast based
on the report.
Bush administration officials expressed concern about the rising
jobless rate, but universally pointed to the recently passed $350
billion tax cut (projected to rise to more than $800 billion once
Congress strikes down various sunset provisions) as
the cure-all for the deepening employment slump.
Its effects will be felt by Americas working families,
seniors and small business owners later this month, as they begin
receiving their tax rebates and larger paychecks, said Labor
Secretary Elaine Chao. As this stimulus builds momentum,
we expect to see more jobs created and more out-of-work Americans
receiving a paycheck again.
The administration called its tax cut legislation the Jobs
and Growth Reconciliation Tax Act of 2003 in a bid to sell
a massive giveaway to the super-rich as a jobs stimulus program.
It has predicted that the cutswhich will go overwhelmingly
to the wealthiest one or two percent of the populationwill
lead to increased consumer spending and business investment.
The slashing of taxes and public funding is certain to deepen
the attacks on public sector jobs that are sweeping the country.
California last week sent layoff notices to as many as 30,000
workers and is expected to put some 13,000 workers in the street
if it is unable to wring sweeping concessions from state workers
unions.
Bushs press secretary Ari Fleischer said that while the
economy had suffered a short and shallow recession, we are
also an economy that is having a slow recovery.
In fact, the hiring slump has been the most protracted since
the Great Depression of the 1930s, with strong indications that
the rise in unemployment is structural with the jobs lost not
coming back. For the US workforce to return by the end of next
year to its January 2001 size, the economy would have to create
on average 120,000 additional jobs a month. Two previous rounds
of tax cuts clearly have failed to produce any job growth whatsoever.
Economic data hardly seems to support the administrations
rosy scenario. The Institute for Supply Management reported last
week that its manufacturing index for June stood at 49.8, up only
a fraction from 49.4 in May. Any reading below 50 points to shrinking
economic activity. The Commerce Department, meanwhile, released
figures showing a 1.7 percent decline from April to May in the
seasonally adjusted annual value of construction projects.
The Labor Department report also found that the average workweek
remained at just 33.7 hours. Companies experiencing growth tend
to lengthen the hours of their current workers before hiring new
people, so the continuing low hours suggest no turnaround is in
sight.
Hardest hit last month was the US manufacturing industry, which
shed 56,000 jobs, for a total of 2.6 million factory jobs destroyed
since July 2000.
Job losses have continued in air transportation and telecommunications,
which have lost 123,000 and 202,000 jobs respectively since the
current slump began in 2001. Recent major layoffs include American
Airlines furloughing of 3,100 flight attendants
the day before the jobless figures were announced. Among them
were 1,778 former TWA attendants who joined American as part of
a 2001 merger. In addition to their jobs, the former TWA workers
lost severance benefits worth two months pay as the result
of a concessions deal struck between the company and their union.
AT&T Wireless Services, meanwhile,
has unveiled plans to slash 1,000 jobs as part of a cost-cutting
program.
Sprint Corp. last month announced that
it is closing its web-hosting business, cutting nearly 500 jobs.
In the manufacturing sector, Boeing handed
out layoff notices to another 845 employees last month, on the
same day that 860 workers spent their last day on the job.
Electronics manufacturer Solectron told 545
workers last week at its La Vergne, Tennessee plant that it will
close operations in stages between now and September. Half of
the employees are temporary workers.
The South Carolina-based Kemet Corp., a manufacturer
of electrical parts for computers and telephones, announced plans
to slash 650 jobs. The company is seeking to drive down costs
by relocating its plants to Mexico and China.
Kennecott Utah Copper, a subsidiary of the
London-based mining conglomerate Rio Tinto Ltd., began laying
off as many as 220 of its hourly operations and maintenance workers15
percent of its total workforce. The parent firm blamed falling
copper prices.
The Finish-based industrial machinery maker Metso
said it would cut 300 jobs, or 3 percent of its US and Canadian
workforce.
Waste Management, the largest US private garbage
hauler, announced that it is cutting 800 white-collar jobs, more
than 3 percent of its workforce. The company already laid off
970 workers in March.
Electronic Data Systems announced last month
that it will cut 2,700 jobs, or 2 percent of its workforce. The
computer services company founded by Ross Perot indicated that
the job cuts were the result of the continued slashing of technology
spending by major corporate customers.
Northern Trust Corp. joined a growing list
of financial services companies handing out pink slips. It will
cut its workforce by about 15 percent, or 1,400 jobs.
Lawson Software, the St. Paul, Minnesota-based
maker of financial software, announced a 111-worker layoff in
June and plans to slash another 234 jobs in September.
The Florida-based retailer Sports Authority
announced last week that it is closing its headquarters as part
of a merger with the Gart Sports Group, wiping out the jobs of
nearly 500 workers.
Two entities involved in maintaining the US blood supply also
announced layoffs. The American Red Cross handed
out layoff notices last month to 236 employees, most of them in
the Washington DC-area. The organization said it was forced to
cut the jobs because of declining contributions and reduced revenues
from its blood services division. And Baxter International
Inc. announced last month that it is cutting 2,500 jobs,
shutting down 26 blood plasma collection plants and one plasma
manufacturing plant.
See Also:
Software giant Oracle bids
for right to destroy jobs
[24 June 2003]
War cannot resolve mounting
US economic problems
[8 April 2003]
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