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Economy Title: U.S. Payrolls Rise 103,000 in September, Jobless Rate at 9.1% Oct. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Employers added more payrolls than forecast in September, job gains were revised up in the prior two months and hours and earnings increased, helping ease concerns the U.S. labor market is deteriorating. Payrolls climbed by 103,000 workers after a revised 57,000 increase the prior month that was more than originally estimated, Labor Department data showed today in Washington. The median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey called for a rise of 60,000. The gain reflected the return to work of 45,000 telecommunications employees. The jobless rate held at 9.1 percent. Faster job growth is a sign employers remain confident the U.S. will avoid a renewed slump, even as unemployment is forecast to remain above 8 percent through 2013. The risk that the worlds largest economy may fall back into a recession has prompted the Federal Reserve and President Barack Obama to announce further measures to sustain the expansion. We are in a slow-growth recovery, Patrick OKeefe, director of economist research at J.H. Cohn LLP in Roseland, New Jersey, said before the report. We are not losing ground but we are not making inroads into the extraordinarily high level of unemployment. Estimates of the 91 economists surveyed by Bloomberg for overall payrolls ranged from a decline of 50,000 to a 115,000 increase. The unemployment rate was projected to hold at 9.1 percent, according to the survey median. Unemployment Rate Unemployment has exceeded 8 percent since February 2009, the longest stretch of such elevated joblessness since monthly records began in 1948. Private payrolls, which exclude government jobs, rose 137,000 after a gain of 32,000 in the prior month, the Labor Department said. The share of the eligible population holding a job rose to 58.3 percent from 58.2 percent. While a labor dispute at Verizon Communications Inc. depressed employment in August, its resolution added about 45,000 workers back to payrolls last month. Conversely, the return of state government workers in Minnesota that lifted the August payroll count by 23,000 wasnt repeated last month. Government Employment Government payrolls decreased by 34,000 in September. Employment at state governments rose by 2,000 last month while local government employment slumped 35,000. Factory payrolls declined 13,000 in September, the biggest decrease since August 2010, after a 4,000 decline in August. Employment at service-providers increased 85,000 in September, the most since April. Construction employment climbed 26,000 last month, the biggest gain since February and led by a jump in non-residential building payrolls. Average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent to $23.12, todays report showed. The average work week for all workers climbed six minutes to 34.3 hours. The so-called underemployment rate -- which includes part- time workers whod prefer a full-time position and people who want work but have given up looking -- increased to 16.5 percent, the highest this year, from 16.2 percent. The number of Americans working part-time for economic reasons jumped 444,000 to 9.3 million. Through August, the economy had recovered about 1.9 million of the 8.75 million jobs lost as a result of the 18-month recession that ended in June 2009. 200,000 a Month Sustained increases of around 200,000 a month are needed to bring unemployment down about a percentage point over a year, according to Eric Green, chief market economist at TD Securities Inc. in New York. The economy expanded at a 1.3 percent pace in the second quarter following a 0.4 percent gain in the first three months of the year, the weakest performance in two years, the Commerce Department reported last week. Consumer spending grew 0.7 percent, the least since the last three months of 2009. Jan Hatzius, chief economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York, says the odds of a renewed U.S. recession are rising as confidence and spending have slumped. This week he said he saw a 40 percent chance the U.S. would slip back into a recession over the next year. Julia Coronado, chief economist for North America at BNP Paribas in New York, forecasts a mild recession. Fed on Economy Economic growth remains slow, Fed policy makers said Sept. 21 as they announced a plan to bring down longer-term lending rates. While officials said they expect some pickup in the pace of recovery over coming quarters, they anticipate the unemployment rate will decline only gradually. Obama last month proposed a $447 billion jobs plan that economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast would help avoid a return to recession by maintaining growth and pushing down the unemployment rate next year. Citigroup Inc., the third-biggest U.S. bank, is among firms that have turned more cautious about hiring. It said last month it will limit hiring to only critical jobs as the economic slowdown continues and revenue slumps. We are currently only filling positions we believe are critical to the line of business or function, Shannon Bell, a spokeswoman for the New York-based bank, said in an interview Sept. 15. New York City States and local governments are freezing hiring or cutting staff. New York Mayor Michael Bloombergs administration this week asked agency heads to cut spending by $2 billion over the next 18 months and freeze hiring on concern that a slowing economy may reduce city revenue. Were looking at extreme economic uncertainty, and state and federal governments that are likely to further cut funds they return to the city, Caswell Holloway, deputy mayor for operations, said in a statement. The mayor is founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP. Some companies are planning to boost payrolls. Ford Motor Co. this week said it has committed to add about 12,000 hourly jobs in its U.S. manufacturing plants by 2015 as part of an agreement with the United Auto Workers. Ford said it will be in-sourcing jobs from Mexico, China and Japan. Ford said this will be 5,750 hourly jobs more than a previously announced 7,000 positions to be added by the end of 2012. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 8.
#2. To: All (#0)
Another flat out lie by those media outlets desperate to prop up the Owe-bama administration. 45,000 of these so called 'newly created jobs' are in fact the Verizon Workers RETURNING TO WORK AFTER GOING ON STRIKE. That cleared up, the fact is even if you accept the LIE HERE, given its October holiday hiring season, this is so far below 'normal' it should frighten the hell out of everybody.
Huh? This report was issued by BLS which specifically cites the affect of the strike. That same strike removed 45K workers from the last report. And, finally, had you ACTUALLY READ THE ARTICLE then "you'd" see [sic] that this fact was both included in the BLS report and reported in the article. /twit That cleared up, the fact is even if you accept the LIE HERE, given its October holiday hiring season Wha...huh? This is the job situation report for SEPTEMBER, Boofer.
#9. To: All (#8)
per the above. Calculated Risk drinks the Company's Kool Aid but does keep the charts accurate...;} " Percent Job Losses During Recessions The second graph shows the job losses from the start of the employment recession, in percentage terms. The dotted line is ex-Census hiring. The red line is moving sideways - and I'll need to expand the graph soon. This was still a weak report, but better than August (although the 45,000 Verizon workers made a big difference). There were decent upwards revisions to the July and August reports too. I'll have much more soon ...
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