Weak Demand for Companies’ Core Products and Services Contributes to Slow Jobs Growth
Tag Archives: BLS
ManpowerGroup’s perspective on the BLS’ Employment Situation Report
Posted in BLS, Karen Miller, Manpower News, Unemployment, Workforce News, World of Work
Tagged BLS, Economic Crisis, Manpower, Recession, Unemployment, USA, Workforce Trends
November U.S. Unemployment
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, unemployment rates were higher in November than a year earlier in all 372 metropolitan areas. Seventeen areas recorded jobless rates of at least 15.0 percent, while 13 areas registered rates below 5.0 percent. The national unemployment rate in November was 9.4 percent, not seasonally adjusted, up from 6.5 percent a year earlier.
Closer to home, Iowa’s unemployment reached 6.4 percent in November, up from 6.1 percent in October and 4.1 percent in November, 2008. In the Des Moines-West Des Moines MSA, roughly 19,800 or 6.2 percent of the workforce was out of work.
Posted in BLS, Employment, Workforce Statistics
Tagged BLS, Manpower, Unemployment, US Unemployment November 2009
The Full U.S. Unemployment Picture – September 2009
Below is the A12 chart from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This chart gives the full unemployment picture of what is going on in the United States. These numbers cover a lot of varying categories and are often referred to but not always shown in full.
Unfortunately at this point it is still not a pretty picture, I do not expect to see any decrease in these numbers until the first half of 2010. That said, I.T. and Manufacturing are two burgeoning sectors of growth albeit they are not wide spread across every state. We are beginning to build toward hiring trends that will go beyond state borders, once that begins there will definitely be more companies willing to put both feet in and start hiring again.
Click Picture to enlarge.
Full U.S. Unemployment Picture – July 2009
Below is the A12 chart from the BLS (Bureau of Labor Statistics) for July 2009. The A12 is the most complete picture of what is going in the work force to date. It is often referred to but rarely shown in its entirety. While they do not break it down by individual state this way, the trends per state typically are represented very well by the overall picture.
As you will notice when looking at the chart, you will need to click on it to read it – unless you have some freaky super eyesight thing going on.
Click on picture to enlarge.
532,000 Private Sector Jobs Lost in May
This does not include public sector jobs. The jobs report on Friday should be interesting: U.S. private employers chopped more than half a million jobs in May, signaling job conditions remain tough and dashing some hopes the economy was not deteriorating as rapidly as thought, a report on Wednesday showed. U.S. companies axed 532,000 jobs last month, though this was fewer than the revised 545,000 jobs lost in April, according to the ADP National Employment Report.
Click on picture to enlarge.
Posted in Unemployment, Workforce Trends
Tagged ADP Employment Report, BLS, Employment Report, Job Loss Report
Visual: U.S. Map of Unemployment by Major Metro – March 2009
Iowa is faring very well amongst the other states in the U.S. having more than one city in the lowest unemployment numbers. In March, 109 metropolitan areas reported jobless rates of at least 10.0 percent, up from 14 areas a year earlier, while 95 areas posted rates below 7.0 percent, down from 329 areas in March 2008. El Centro, Calif., recorded the highest unemployment rate, 25.1 percent. The areas with the next highest rates were Merced, Calif., 20.4 percent; Yuba City, Calif., 19.5 percent; and Elkhart-Goshen, Ind., 18.8 percent. Among the 18 areas with jobless rates of at least 15.0 percent, 12 were located in California. Houma-Bayou Cane-Thibodaux, La., and Iowa City, Iowa, registered the lowest jobless rates, 3.6 percent each in March, followed closely by Ames, Iowa, at 3.7 percent.
Click Picture to Enlarge.
Posted in Unemployment, Workforce Trends
Tagged Ames IA, BLS, Iowa City IA, March 2009, Metropolitan, North America Unemployment, Unemployment
Actual Unemployment Rate Is 13.9 Percent, Merrill Lynch Says
A Merrill Lynch analysis of the nonfarm payroll numbers contains some good, some bad, and some ugly news.
The analysis, released on Friday, February 6, by Merrill North American economist David Rosenberg indicates that the actual unemployment rate, while normally higher than the official one by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, hit a level not seen since at least 1994.
First the good news: Inflation is not much of a threat as a result.
Now for the bad news: As Rosenberg explained, what the official unemployment rate misses is the vast degree of ‘underemployment’ as companies cut back on the hours that people who are still employed are working. Those hours have declined 1.2 percent in the past 12 months.
The BLS still counts people as employed if they are working part time, but the number of workers who have been forced into that status because of slack economic conditions has ballooned nearly 70 percent in the past year, according to the study. Rosenberg said was that was a record growth rate for the 15-year period he has studied.
And here’s the ugly part: When that amount of slack in employment is taken into account, Rosenberg found that the ‘real’ unemployment rate has actually climbed to 13.9 percent, an all-time high for the period he studied. And that figure is up from 13.5 percent in December and 11.2 percent a year ago.
As a result, the economist said worries that the federal deficit will lead to inflation anytime soon are misplaced.
“With this amount of excess capacity in the jobs market, and keeping in mind that the inflation process is dominated by the direction of labor costs, it is tough to believe that inflation at this point is anything but a far-in-the-distance prospect,” Rosenberg wrote. “A present-day reality it is not.”
Original Source: Ronald Fink of Financial Week.
Job Openings and Labor Turnover: December 2008
Well the December numbers just came out from the BLS for new hires and turnover for December 2008. As expected the news is fairly dismal. While I understand no one wants to hear any bad news, especially those looking for work it is at least good to be aware of the overall situation. Something to always keep in mind when looking at these types of numbers and charts is that not every area in America feels the recession in the same way. One spot of good news though is that the blue line which represents new hires is heading in the right direction. Hopefully that will continue (but keep in mind that this is for December).
What we see is that on the last business day of December, there were 2.7 million job openings in the United States, and the job openings rate was 1.9 percent, the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor reported today. The job openings rate in December was the lowest point so far in the 8-year-old series. The hires rate was essentially unchanged in December at 2.9 percent and remains low. The total separations rate jumped to 3.7 percent, due to rising layoffs and discharges.
The red line is seperations/discharges and the blue line is new hires. You can click on the picture to make it bigger.
Posted in Workforce News
Tagged BLS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, December 2008, Hiring, Job Openings, Layoffs, New Hires, North America, Turnover, USA







