Jobless Rate Falls To 9.7%, 20,000 Jobs Cut

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Jobless Rate Falls To 9.7%, 20,000 Jobs Cut

Postby bogus info » Fri Feb 05, 2010 8:08 pm

Jobless Rate Falls To 9.7%, 20,000 Jobs Cut

Lucia Mutikani
Reuters US Online Report Business News

Feb 05, 2010 09:05 EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Payrolls unexpectedly fell in January, but the unemployment rate surprisingly dropped to a five-month low, according to a government report on Friday that hinted at labor market improvement.

The Labor Department said the economy shed 20,000 jobs after losing 150,000 jobs in December. November was revised to a gain of 64,000, up from 4,000. Annual benchmark revisions to payrolls data showed the economy has purged 8.4 million jobs since the start of the recession in December 2007.

Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast payrolls gaining 5,000 and the unemployment rate to edge up to 10.1 percent in January from 10 percent. Median estimates from the top 20 forecasters expected payrolls to be unchanged last month.


more here: http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/news/2 ... hp?ref=fpa
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Jobless Rate Falls To 9.7%, 20,000 Jobs Cut

Postby mimi » Fri Feb 05, 2010 8:21 pm

Bogus had posted the link to this chart somewhere else.

The red bars are the accelerating rate of job loss during President Bush's last year in office; the blue bars are the decelerating rate of job loss during President Obama's first year of office.




http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/archiv ... _chart.php


I love that chart.
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Jobless Rate Falls To 9.7%, 20,000 Jobs Cut

Postby mimi » Tue Mar 09, 2010 1:35 am

via: Oh, For Goodness Sake

Jobs Picture Better Than We Think

Something Amazing is Happening With the Payroll Figures. The February non-farm payroll showed a further loss of 36,000 jobs, versus an expected loss of 75,000, and the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 9.7%. December was revised up by 41,000 and January was revised down by 6,000, so netting everything out there was essentially no change. Those hired now exactly equal those fired, about 3 million a month. …

There is a barbell effect in the labor markets which no one seems to see, which is rendering the aggregate payroll figures meaningless. There is a barbell effect taking place, where the 40% who have been jobless for more than six months, who worked in the bubble industries of real estate, housing, and construction, are never going to see their jobs come back.

The 60% who are short term unemployed, who recently lost jobs in finance, accounting, and health care, are getting rehired very quickly. In fact, 20% of the jobless are getting rehired in only six weeks. There is another effect at work. While the employment rate for those with no high school diploma is 16%, the kind of worker who lost their manufacturing jobs to China, the jobless rate for those with college degrees is only 4.5%. This is proof that the dying sectors of the US economy is delivering the highest unemployment rates, and that America is clawing its way up the value chain in the global race for economic supremacy. It is what America does best, creative destruction with a turbocharger. There is a third influence here, which could be huge. The BLS only contacts existing businesses for its survey.

It doesn’t survey companies operating out of someone’s garage in startup mode. Given the huge ongoing dislocations in our industrial structure and the incredible advances in software, the Internet, and cloud computing, this could be one of the biggest job creators of all. So far, it is not being counted at all. The bottom line is that payroll figures are much better than they appear at first glance. Red Alert! The markets don’t know this.


Remainder at Business Insider.
http://www.businessinsider.com/heres-wh ... zes-2010-3

Visit Adelante's blog as well:
http://ohforgoodnesssake.com/
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