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GDP growth down, housing sector suffering
Only 113,000 jobs added in US in July
By David Walsh
9 August 2006
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Slowing job growth, stagnating wages, soaring corporate earningsthis
is the situation that the Bush administration continues to tout
as vibrant, an economy in full swing.
Contrary to predictions, the US economy added only 113,000
jobs in July, according to figures released by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) August 4. The official jobless rate climbed to
4.8 percent, from 4.6 in June. Many economists had anticipated
an increase of 150,000 jobs, approximately the number of people
entering the job market on average each month.
Some quarter of a million people joined the jobless rolls last
month in the US; especially hard hit were African-Americans, whose
unemployment rate jumped from 9 to 9.5 percent, the highest increase
in eight months. Joblessness among African-American teenagers
went up by 14 percent, to 31.6 percent, in July. Official overall
teen unemployment remains around 15 percent.
The number of long-term unemployed, after a decline in June,
returned to its May level of 1.3 million; these are people out
of work for half a year or more. The long-term unemployed account
for 18.6 percent of the total. The average number of months required
to find a job increased from 16.2 to 17.3, the largest monthly
jump since August 2005.
The effects of Hurricane Katrina, and the miserable performance
by national and local officials, continue to have an impact on
large numbers of people. Only 6 in 10 of the 1.1 million counted
as evacuees at the time of the hurricane have returned to their
August 2005 homes. The jobless rate for evacuees is 11.9 percent;
the rate for those still not living in their former residences
is 23 percent.
The increase of 113,000 jobs in July was in line with recent
increases, but well below the average monthly gain for the 12
months ending in March (169,000). In 2005, excluding the two months
affected by Katrina, monthly employment grow by 190,000 on average.
One of the areas beginning to suffer seriously is the housing
sector. Construction job growth has been flat over the first half
of 2006. According to the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), Residential
construction has been flat since April, and employment among residential
contracting establishments is down 25,000 this year, including
9,000 last month. This dynamic affects not only construction jobs,
but it also dampens job growth in ancillary sectors. Real estate
employment, for example, has been flat since April, and job growth
among credit intermediaries, such as those who arrange mortgages
and refinancing, is also slower.
House sales are down by 10 percent this year and real home
prices are falling. Residential investment (in building, renovation,
etc.) in April-June 2006 fell for the third straight quarter,
and by a hefty 6.3 percent.
Factory unemployment fell in July by 15,000 jobs, largely offsetting
an increase in June of 22,000. Job losses last month occurred
in transportation equipment (9,000), computer and electronic products
(8,000) and textile mills (2,000).
Retail trade experienced no growth in July. The sector, according
to the Center for Economic and Policy Research, has lost 85,000
jobs since February, with 72,000 of those lost jobs coming in
general merchandise stores.
The Associated Press cited the comments of Lynn Reaser,
chief economist at Bank of Americas Investment Strategies
Group: Companies are feeling the strain of rising costs
for energy and raw materials as well as higher interest rates.
They also remain uncertain about the economys prospects
for the balance of the year.
Hourly wage growth rose by 0.4 percent in July, and wages are
up 3.8 percent from a year ago, still below the latest inflation
figures (4.3 percent from June 2005-June 2006). Even this figure
is apparently somewhat misleading. The EPI notes, The acceleration
in wage growth is partly related to the tightening of the job
market over the past year, but also a function of job composition,
as employment has grown more quickly in higher-end sectors, like
professional services, than in lower-end ones, such as retail.
Manufacturing wages increased July 2005-July 2006 by only 1.5
percent, which tied with May 2005-May 2006 for the lowest annual
gain in wagesbefore adjusting for inflationin almost
20 years.
Statistics released in late July by the federal governments
Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) underscored the general slowing
down of the American economy. The BEA figures indicated that the
US Gross Domestic Product increased by only 2.5 percent in the
second quarter of 2006, less than half the growth rate of 5.6
percent in the first three months of the year.
In the second quarter, personal consumption expenditures in
the US grew by only 2.5 percent, down from 4.8 percent in the
first quarter; private investment growth fell sharply to 1.7 percent,
from 7.8 percent. Exports increased by 3.3 percent, down from
14 percent in the first three months of 2006. The growth in federal
government expenditures actually fell by 3.4 percent, compared
to 8.8 percent growth in the first quarter.
The BEA figures also revealed only a 1.6 percent growth in
domestic demand (final sales to domestic purchasers), a marked
slowdown from the 5.4 percent reported in the first quarter.
The financial pages continue to be full of warnings about inflation,
by which the big business press means the danger of workers succeeding
in gaining pay increases. EPI figures reveal that, in fact, from
the first quarter of 2005 to the first quarter of 2006, unit labor
costs added only 0.1 percent to prices, while rising profit margins
contributed 2.3 percent to price growth. In essence,
comments the EPI, the entirety of price inflation
in the non-financial corporate sector over the last year can be
explained by rising profit margins (emphasis in the original).
USA Today carried an article August 7 on corporate earnings
that tended to confirm this diagnosis. It complacently comments,
The streak lives. Investors can forget about oil prices,
inflation and Mideast unrest for a while. Corporate America is
still enjoying a record stretch of double-digit earnings growth
that doesnt appear to be stopping anytime soon.
More than 83 percent of companies have reported their
second-quarter earnings, and theyve turned in 13 percent
growth, says Standard & Poors. Thats astounding,
because it means theyve reported double-digit earnings growth
for a never-before-seen 17-consecutive quarters.
Leading the pack were nine giant companies, most in energy
and finance, including ExxonMobil and Goldman Sachs. While working
class families have struggled with record high temperatures and
$3 or more for a gallon of gasoline, American corporations have
raked in massive profits.
In the second quarter of 2006, 70 percent of companies
have topped estimates, notes USA Today, well
above the 60 percent that beat estimates on average since 1994....
Companies havent beaten estimates by this large a margin
since the first quarter of 2004. Energy, again, was a big reason
for this. Energy companies have turned in 40 percent growth, topping
the 19 percent growth that analysts were expecting on April 1.
All of these economic facts, contrary to the wishful thinking
of the Bush administration and its media apologists, have real
consequences.
An op-ed piece in the Providence (Rhode Island) Journal
August 5 by Jerry Landay, a retired CBS News correspondent, notes
the fading of the American dream. Landay writes: The
material components of the Dream were steady jobs, inexpensive
mortgages and other credit, cheap gasoline, secure pensions, and
flag-waving confidence in imperial Americaan invulnerable
power, which could do no wrong.
But the deadly albatross of Iraq, gasoline at over $3
a gallon, weak growth in jobs and pay, by companies that wont
share productivity gains with workers and do export their work
to Asia, have produced the sharpest drop in consumer confidence
since the recession of the early 1980s.
He continues: Adding insult to injury, the redistribution
of our dwindling wealth under Bush widens the gap between the
wealth aristocracy and the rest of us.... The
rest of us are in a squeeze as inflation is driven by energy costs,
medical care and prescription drugs. Home-foreclosure rates are
growing; they jumped an average 13 percent a month nationally
at the end of 2005, with highs of 30 percent in Massachusetts,
61 percent in Texas, 70 percent in Arkansas, 145 percent in New
Mexico, and 210 percent in West Virginia.
A number of large corporations have recently announced mass
layoffs. Time Warners AOL, the Internet
giant, reported August 3 plans to slash 5,000 jobs, or a quarter
of its global workforce, within the next six months.
The company employs about 5,000 workers in northern Virginia,
where its headquarters is located. It also maintains call centers
in Oklahoma City; Ogden, Utah; and Tucson, Arizona. Some 3,000
AOL employees are in Europe. There are also offices in New York
City and Silicon Valley in California. Time Warner as a whole
employs some 87,000 people.
The Electronic Data Systems Corporation (EDS),
which runs other firms computers, issued a third-quarter
earnings forecast that was below analysts expectations,
and announced that it would cut from 3,000 to 4,000 jobs in the
second half of 2006, while hiring more employees in India and
China. The company had some 120,000 workers as of June 30.
On August 4 Sun Microsystems laid off some
950 workers, 430 in the Bay Area, as part of a restructuring plan
that will eventually see the elimination of as many as 5,000 jobs.
The Santa Clara, California-based company announced two months
ago that it would slash its global workforce by approximately
13 percent in an effort to make the company consistently profitable
again.
The Swiss Banking firm Credit Suisse Group
reported August 2 that its second-quarter profits had more than
doubled, and that it planned to cut 300 jobs in the US. Credit
Suisses chief financial officer did not reveal, in a conference
call with the media, which employees would lose their jobs.
See Also:
US job growth falls in May,
amid signs of slowing economy
[3 June 2006]
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