U.S. Job Openings Fall To Lowest Level In At Least Nine Years

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CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER | 10/ 9/09 08:03 PM | AP

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WASHINGTON — The number of job seekers competing for each opening has reached the highest point since the recession began, according to government data released Friday.

The employment crisis is expected to worsen as companies stay reluctant to hire. Many economists expect a jobless recovery, putting pressure on President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats to stimulate job creation.

There are about 6.3 unemployed workers competing, on average, for each job opening, a Labor Department report shows. That's the most since the department began tracking job openings nine years ago, and up from only 1.7 workers when the recession began in December 2007.

The highest point after the 2001 recession was 2.8 workers per opening in July 2003, as the economy suffered through a jobless recovery.

Employers have cut a net total of 7.2 million jobs during the downturn. While layoffs are slowing, Friday's report shows the other critical piece of a labor market recovery – hiring – has yet to begin.

"Fewer people are facing job loss," said Heidi Shierholz, an economist at Economic Policy Institute in Washington, "but once you have lost your job, you are in serious trouble."

The department's Job Openings and Labor Turnover survey found less than 2.4 million openings in August, the latest data available. That may seem like a lot of jobs, but it's down from 3.7 million a year ago and half its peak in June 2007. It's also the lowest tally on nine years of government records.

At the same time, the number of unemployed Americans doubled from the beginning of the recession to 14.9 million in August.

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Economists fear the job market will take years to recover.

Shierholz said the economy faces a "jobs gap" of almost 10 million – the 7.2 million jobs lost plus the roughly 125,000 per month that would have been needed since the recession began just to keep up with population growth.

To close that gap and get back to pre-recession levels in two years would require more than 500,000 new jobs per month, a pace of job creation that hasn't been seen since 1950-51, Shierholz said.

Most analysts expect the nation to keep losing jobs through this year and the unemployment rate to peak above 10 percent by the middle of next year, even as the economy starts to recover.

"The recovery in output continues to be unaccompanied by a recovery in jobs," said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist for IHS Global Insight. He expects the unemployment rate, currently at 9.8 percent, will be at 8.6 percent in 2012.

Cynthia Rosso, a Potomac Falls, Va.-based marketing and communications professional laid off in March, is painfully aware of the competition she faces.

A networking group where she once announced jobs she was trying to fill as a manager is now dominated by people looking for work.

"Very few people get up and say, 'I have a job to offer,'" she said.

Rosso went to a job fair over the summer but turned back after seeing a line snaking around the building. She later heard that 3,000 job seekers showed up to vie for the attention of a handful of employers.

The jobs crisis is likely to have political repercussions. The last time the unemployment rate topped 10 percent, in 1982, President Ronald Reagan's Republican party lost 26 seats in midterm elections.

Congressional Democrats are working on various proposals to both provide relief to the unemployed and create jobs. The House and Senate have both agreed to extend jobless benefits, though the two bills have to be reconciled.

House and Senate leaders also are considering extending an $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers, and creating a new credit for companies that add jobs.

Still, Republicans in Congress say rising joblessness and the talk of additional policy moves demonstrates that the administration's $787 billion stimulus package hasn't worked. Administration officials contend that job losses would have been worse without it.

The Federal Reserve, meanwhile, is expected to keep the short-term interest rate it controls at a record low near zero until sometime next year, in an effort to bolster the economy. High unemployment makes price hikes less likely, but some analysts fear inflation could result if the Fed waits too long to raise rates.

Economists offer several reasons why companies aren't hiring. Many employers laid off huge numbers of workers earlier this year but have since found that productivity jumped, enabling them to maintain output.

"For now, many of them are trying to find out how far they can push that," Gault said.

Many employers also are unsure about whether the economy can continue to grow once the impact of government stimulus fades and aren't likely to hire until that uncertainty eases, Gault said.

Efforts by the administration to reform health care and address climate change also create uncertainty among businesses about whether they'll soon be facing higher costs, according to Steven Davis, an economics professor at the University of Chicago.

"When there's that type of uncertainty in the air, it's a good reason to pull back and wait before making any (hiring) decisions," he said.

WASHINGTON — The number of job seekers competing for each opening has reached the highest point since the recession began, according to government data released Friday. The employment crisis is...
WASHINGTON — The number of job seekers competing for each opening has reached the highest point since the recession began, according to government data released Friday. The employment crisis is...
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"The number of job seekers competing for each opening has reached the highest point since the recession began, according to government data released Friday” yet the repubi/cans managed to block the extension of unemployment benefits to this very deserving, hard working folks!! What a damn shame on their part!!
Myself , I do not worry, I have plenty from my mineral royalties. Ya! Under my large fingernails!!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:25 PM on 10/16/2009

To all of the people who are pandering as to why there are no jobs, ask yourselves, where are the job creators and innovators? The President is trying, but he can not create jobs by himself. I'm thinking investors are holding back, not because they do not have the capital or resources, but this would be a sure way for Obama to fail.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 PM on 10/16/2009
- jennylynn I'm a Fan of jennylynn 49 fans permalink

Wonder how many of them voted for this Hope and Change?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:30 AM on 10/13/2009

The government has put the same punch bowl out that got us into the mess in the first place. More debt and consumption and don't worry about paying it back. (Berbnanke= Greenspan II)

Good articles: http://pie.im/af30

If this is change we can believe in, count me out in 2012. Obama should not have reappointed bernanke.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 AM on 10/13/2009

Obama needs to carry out more reform. He needs to get things done instead of just talking and planning because his voters are becoming impatient and the robber barons are at it again.

Good articles: http://pie.im/af30

2 party system gives no results.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 AM on 10/12/2009
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WHERE HAVE ALL THE WORKERS GONE LONG TIME PASSING?

Outsource executive suites abroad where BANKS have worst return on investment.

Force companies to disclose supply chains & refuse to patronize those who use slave labor

Charcoal=B­razil+Indi­a=Produced by slaves held captive through debt bondage.

Some are injured or burn to d e a t h in the kilns

Carefully managed system of tariffs+import taxes+trade agreements=More Manufacturing in US

Modern day version of WPA, CCC work projects help create our culture.

It’s ridiculous that engineers, scientists, artists, musicians, writers, teachers are jobless!

Talent and creativity is the very thing we need the most.

[Thanks Agent 86]

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:37 AM on 10/12/2009
- RomeoMD25 I'm a Fan of RomeoMD25 51 fans permalink

and how does government mysteriously grow and obtain so much power? The answer, corporations. The United States is supposed to be a government of the people by the people and for the people... it's now a government of wall street, for wall street and by wall street, it's not the people's government who raised the power bar....

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:09 AM on 10/12/2009
- SiouxSayer I'm a Fan of SiouxSayer 36 fans permalink

I had to close my photo studio due to lack of clientele, this has ended my 13 year marriage and my closeness to my 2 daughters. I now have no job, no formal education, bills to pay, and the moment our home sells (if it does we'll break even....ma­ybe), I'll have a few hundred bucks to start my life over at 41 during the worst economy in 80 years.....­Anyone have any networking contacts I can call for a job or to lend me a hand? Dems?..Rep­ublicans? Anyone?...­. I'm a good man who had dreams, goals and hope for the future. Now I'm slowly fading away...and I cannot figure a way out. Even when we (the 'affected') ask for help, all the feel good harmony of peace on earth and 'help our fellow man' fades as quickly as a shadow on a moonlit night. Career centers and state labor offices throw up their hands and point to the unemployment rate. I still need help or maybe a path, a positive offer...an­ything. I don't want my daughter's father to be a homeless embarrassment. I have life experience and talent. I need help.....E­mail and former website link is on my profile here if anyone can help. Heck, anyone willing to look at my work and serve as a professional reference for me? Have a couch, basement, garage loft? Anything will help.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 PM on 10/11/2009

Part III

Retire people who are totally bedridden SHOULD NOT HAVE TO WORK, but the rest of us should have to do something. The poor bedridden people may actually want to work, but that's the breaks (spoken by someone who couldn't even bend over for 6 months without hubby screamming at her - has something to do with the pressure in your eyes).

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 PM on 10/11/2009

Part II

Besides drilling, push wind, solar power. The goal should be that we are totally energy-independant in 10 years. Next, start buying back our debt from everyone else. If you have to, tax people and put it in redeemable accounts at age 65, or your kids get it when your 65. (Have to hold debt for 10 years however). Get us free from everybody. Make things at home. Become self-sufficient. Make the world want to come to us and trade, not be at their mercy.

Bring all our tioops home over the next five years unless there's an ongoing war. Japan, Germany, NATO, Bali Bali - wherever. If you want us to help defend you, figure out whose side of the table you want to be on.

Everybody should work. Retired people who are totally bedridden should work 15-20 hrs a week, with 2 months of unpaid vacation. People who have someplace to go live longer. We have children who need individual mentoring. We have adults who need training to build things, modify things, fix things.

If we put this country first, we can once again be #1 - not just for our benefit, but a stable US makes the world a more stable place. We can demand other countries pay a better wage, work on the environment, and do something for their own poor.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 PM on 10/11/2009

If we don not start changing things around here pretty quickly, we are in for a much bigger slide.

We owe the Chinese, and others, a trillion dollars or more. We buy everything from them, and they buy almost nothing of ours (as if we really had a lot to sell, but they don't even want that little bit).

RAISE TAXES ON EVERYONE. Tax rich people so they pay 50% (all fed,state,local combined). Tax soda, fast food, and sweets, even if its just a penny a purchase. If you can afford to buy a mini-big MAC for $1, and 8 cents currently sales tax, you can afford another penny!

Start drilling everywhere, and mandate that trucks and trains convert to natural gas within ten years. Tell T Boone that the govt will fund natural gas storage and pumps at all gas stations, fixing 10% of the current stations every year for the next ten years. Anyone who wants to pump natural gas will have to pay 50% of those pumps, spread out over the 10 years. Get some of those laid off from Wall Street who know how to scam us all, and have them read those balance sheets and look for where T Boone is not actually giving up profits. Anything you find and can prove, you (the individual) gets to keep 10%. Switch teams every year. Find any fraud, bad bookkeeping that your cohearts helped cover up? Get to keep 20% of the illegal amount.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:54 PM on 10/11/2009
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If only modern humans could learn to do something useful...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 PM on 10/11/2009
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Well that sucks. Remember, before you put the revolver in your mouth sh00t a few bankers...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 PM on 10/11/2009
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But what if you are a banker?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 PM on 10/11/2009

As an unemployed person (1.5 years now) who decided that the only way to get a decent job was to go back to school, this scares the boogers out of me. In a year, I will have 2 degrees, a huge loan, and no job, if what you are saying is still true when I graduate in 2010.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:08 PM on 10/11/2009
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