Productivity Climbs 6.2% In Fourth Quarter 2009 As Labor Costs Fall

CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER   02/ 4/10 05:49 PM ET   AP

Us Productivity
U.S. Productivity Jumps 6.2% In Fourth Quarter As Labor Costs Fall

WASHINGTON — Employers are managing to boost production without creating new jobs. The question is when they'll feel the need to ramp up hiring.

Squeezing more output from their existing staffs allowed companies to boost productivity in the October-December quarter. And last week, the number of people filing new claims for jobless aid rose. The two Labor Department reports Thursday suggested that companies are still cutting costs and putting off hiring even as the economy recovers.

Many employers lack confidence that the recovery is sustainable, especially as government stimulus measures fade, economists said. Companies still feel bruised from the recession.

"Businesses have been through a traumatic experience and are going to be cautious about hiring," said Julia Coronado, senior U.S. economist at BNP Paribas.

Productivity rose by a seasonally adjusted 6.2 percent in the fourth quarter, above analysts' expectations of a 6 percent rise. That was the third straight quarter of sharp gains. It indicated that companies are squeezing more output out of their work forces.

Productivity often increases at the end of recessions as companies ramp up output before hiring new workers. Rising productivity can raise living standards in the long run. But it can also make it easier for companies to put off adding jobs.

The department also said labor costs fell 4.4 percent, the third decline in the past four quarters. Falling labor costs can boost company profits. Hourly compensation rose 1.5 percent, the department said. But labor costs fell because the rise in compensation was much less than the productivity increase.

The department's separate report on initial claims for jobless benefits said claims rose unexpectedly last week by 8,000 to 480,000. The rise in claims is the fourth in the past five weeks. It disappointed economists, who thought claims would resume a downward trend evident in the fall and early winter. The four-week average, which smooths fluctuations, rose for the third straight week to 468,750.

"It is starting to look as though the downward trend in claims ... has stalled," Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, wrote in a note to clients.

The four-week average had fallen 32 percent from August until early last month. That raised hopes that the economy would start to generate net job gains soon. But the reversal of the trend could mean that ramped-up hiring is still months away.

On Friday, the Labor Department will issue its January employment report. Economists project it will show a tiny gain of 5,000 jobs. That wouldn't be nearly enough to lower the unemployment rate, which is expected rise to 10.1 percent.

Most economists say claims need to fall to about 425,000 or below for a month to signal that employers are stepping up hiring.

Still, some positive signs emerged in the productivity report. Hours worked in the fourth quarter rose 1 percent. That was the first increase since the second quarter of 2007. Output rose 7.2 percent, the largest increase since the third quarter of 2003.

To continue increasing production, economists say companies will eventually have to start adding jobs again.

"You can push your workers but so far," said Anika Khan, an economist at Wells Fargo Securities. "At some point businesses have to begin to hire."

What's not clear is when. Employers are increasing the hours worked for their current employees and adding temp jobs, Coronado said. Those are positive signs that companies want more labor.

"But it hasn't yet spilled over to permanent hiring," Khan said.

An example is Marvin Windows and Doors in Warrod, Minn., which has reduced the hours for most of its 5,000 employees from full time to 32 hours a week. And spokesman John Kirchner said the company isn't going to hire anyone before all its workers are back to full time.

Khan thinks the economy could begin generating net job gains as early as March. But they won't be enough to hold down the unemployment rate. Wells Fargo expects the rate to peak at 10.5 percent in the second half of this year.

Concerns about unemployment contributed to fears on Wall Street about the global recovery. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 268 points, or 2.6 percent, and briefly traded below 10,000 for the first time since Nov. 6. Broader stock averages fell sharply, too.

Employers have shed 7.2 million workers since the recession began. Productivity has jumped as the economy has begun to recover. The nation's gross domestic product, the broadest measure of output, rose 5.7 percent in the October-December quarter, the fastest rise in six years.

Productivity is the key ingredient to rising living standards. It enables companies to pay workers more without raising prices and spurring inflation.

A separate report from the Commerce Department reinforced that manufacturing activity has become a pocket of strength in the economy. Orders to U.S. factories posted a big gain in December – rising 1 percent last month, double the forecast by economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters. The advance was the eighth in the past nine months. It was led by orders for metals such as steel and aluminum, as well as machinery.

Meanwhile, the number of people continuing to claim unemployment benefits was unchanged at 4.6 million. That data lags behind initial claims by a week. But the continuing claims don't include millions of people who have used up the regular 26 weeks of benefits typically provided by states, and are receiving extended benefits for up to 73 additional weeks, paid for by the federal government.

More than 5.8 million people were receiving extended benefits in the week that ended Jan. 16, up from about 5.6 million the previous week. That figure indicates that overall hiring hasn't picked up.

Still, some technology companies that laid off workers during the recession are starting to add jobs as they ramp up spending on equipment and software. Cisco Systems Inc., the world's largest maker of computer networking equipment, said Wednesday it will hire a net total of 2,000 to 3,000 people in the next few quarters. The company laid off 2,000 people during the downturn.

And search giant Google Inc. has said it would like to add between 2,000 and 3,000 jobs this year.

Other employers are still cutting jobs. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said Wednesday that it will eliminate 300 administrative jobs at its headquarters. The company has cut almost 14,000 jobs in the past 13 months, including 11,200 positions at its Sam's Club stores.

Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc., a unit of Japan's Sony Corp., said Tuesday it is laying off 450 people and eliminating 100 open positions.

_____

AP Business Writers Alan Zibel in Washington, Alex Veiga in Los Angeles and Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — Employers are managing to boost production without creating new jobs. The question is when they'll feel the need to ramp up hiring. Squeezing more output from their existing staffs...
WASHINGTON — Employers are managing to boost production without creating new jobs. The question is when they'll feel the need to ramp up hiring. Squeezing more output from their existing staffs...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realpolitic
GOP is full of sound and fury, signifying nothing!
01:14 AM on 02/05/2010
Productivity gains used to lead to wage gains until about the Reagan revolution and then workers started losing ground. Business gained the upper hand either because of the decimation of unions or manufacturers could simply move abroad. Anyway, workers do not share in the productivity gains which increase the bottom line of firms and should be shared. Now top manager simply disperse the gains among themselves or the distant shareholders profit. The conservatives seem to want a low wage economy where workers have little influence on management and everyone works at Walmart. Only with such a wage structure people can not spend money they do not have, for long anyway, purchasing suffers and then businesses suffer as well. Conservatives do not seem to understand that a race to a low wage economy is not the best way to stimulate the economy or improve people's lives.
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laaambchop
Cheerfulness is a sign of wisdom
06:57 AM on 02/05/2010
Some people still think we are all one drop of sweat away from starring in a Horatio Alger story.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realpolitic
GOP is full of sound and fury, signifying nothing!
08:43 AM on 02/05/2010
If only it was fiction.
07:55 PM on 02/04/2010
Let's speak clearly:

Do you know what it means when they say that labor costs fell?

It means YOU are making less money.

Any questions?
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laaambchop
Cheerfulness is a sign of wisdom
08:34 PM on 02/04/2010
I do not know one exempt professional who works less than 50 hours per week. And that is on the low end.
10:53 PM on 02/04/2010
And are making what they used to (in adjusted income) what they used to for a forty hour week.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
05:01 PM on 02/04/2010
'"Businesses have been through a traumatic experience," said Julia Coronado, senior U.S. economist at BNP Paribas.'

So have human workers. We may not care about businesses anymore and with all their gripes of "Why aren't people spending?", they should realize they need workers as much as everything else.
04:13 PM on 02/04/2010
I would bet that the rise in productivity is confined to the private sector. The public sector keeps getting raises, adding more employees and performing less work. The public sector productivity rate is probably negative and the government is too embarrassed to publish it.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
05:02 PM on 02/04/2010
A lie.

Many city and county governments are facing freezes and pay cuts. It's not like anyone is hiding that information from you. A simple web search reveals more than you're willing to admit, acknowledge, or perhaps, fathom.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
allamericanelaine
Mid-West WF over 60 - Liberal Independent
01:19 PM on 02/04/2010
Of course productivity is up...I am now the last person in my department doing the job of 4 people, working 12 hours a day for less money than I was making a year ago. If I want a paycheck then this is what I have to do....in the meantime the execs at the top of the feeding chain reward themselves with bonuses for cutting costs!
01:38 PM on 02/04/2010
I'm in the exact same boat
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
05:06 PM on 02/04/2010
Life is what we make of it.
01:10 PM on 02/04/2010
i believe this about as much as i believe the unemployment has held steady at 10% for last 3-4 months

Lying to get 'money' is nothing new to the FED and Banks and Wall Street
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NoWMDs
Obama got Osama
12:53 PM on 02/04/2010
Now you know why they hate unions and contract...unless it's a multi million dollar contract between the CEO and the corporation, then it's ok, even if they run the company into the ground and then jump ship with their golden parachute.
DanBest
My micro bio is empty
12:04 PM on 02/04/2010
The American worker. The gift that keeps on giving. To the shareholders.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sposton
right to tell what they don't want to hear
11:30 AM on 02/04/2010
Corporatocracy wins when workers lose! Until we change this this our country will continue sliding into the abyss.

There is something fundamentally wrong with our economy and its economics. Neo-classical economics is a spent force in the same fashion Marxism is. I think it is time to take a look at what economics heretics talk about; we may just find a way out. With the present economics we are surely doomed.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hurried Harry
11:23 AM on 02/04/2010
Work harder, faster and for less, so we can make more, faster, and for less. They don't even realize they are hurting themselves in the long run - because without consumers, its all for naught. And that's the top talent doing the thinking.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
05:07 PM on 02/04/2010
Talented at what, going to the bathroom?
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laaambchop
Cheerfulness is a sign of wisdom
06:58 AM on 02/05/2010
"Working smart"

and hiring management consultants...who always tell you to do what you were doing 10 years ago...