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More Employees QUIT Their Jobs As Economy Improves

CHRISTOPHER LEONARD and CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER   06/ 9/10 06:13 PM ET   AP

Jobless

One sign of better economic times is when more people start finding jobs. Another is when they feel confident enough to quit them.

More people quit their jobs in the past three months than were laid off – a sharp reversal after 15 straight months in which layoffs exceeded voluntary departures. The trend suggests the job market is finally thawing.

Some of the quitters are leaving for new jobs. Others have no firm offers. But their newfound confidence about landing work is itself evidence of more hiring and a strengthening economy.

"There is a century's worth of evidence that bears out this view that quits rise and layoffs fall as the job market improves," said Steven Davis, an economist at the University of Chicago.

Still, the number of people quitting their jobs is nowhere near what it was before the recession. Economists expect the improvement in the job market to be fitful, rather than consistent. In May, for example, private employers added only 41,000 net jobs after adding 218,000 in April.

Yet the long-term trend points to an improving job market. The economy has created a net 982,000 jobs this year after a recession that wiped out more than 8 million of them.

The government says the number of people quitting rose in April to nearly 2 million. That was the most in more than a year and an increase of nearly 12 percent since January. That compares with 1.75 million people who were laid off in April, the fewest since January 2007, before the recession began.

A Federal Reserve report Wednesday examining the economy region by region also found the job market is slowly improving in most places. The report was yet another piece of evidence that the recovery will plod ahead with steady, if not blistering, growth.

During the depths of the recession, workers were hesitant to quit – and not only because jobs were scarce. Even if they found a new job, some feared that accepting it would leave them vulnerable to a layoff. At many companies, layoffs follow a simple formula: Last hired, first fired.

Many clung to their jobs out of fear, said David Adams, vice president of training at Adecco, a national staffing agency. When Adecco tried to recruit workers to fill open positions, it frequently ran into the same obstacle: Few workers felt like betting on a new job that might soon disappear.

Not so much any more. Adecco is seeing more employed workers seeking interviews, rather than laid off workers searching for a lifeline.

"The hangover is kind of over," Adams said. "It's really starting to move toward a market where the employee can have a lot more confidence making a move."

That's why Katie Charland just quit her job at a parenting magazine in Phoenix to take a position with a nonprofit that supplies children's educational programs.

Charland, 27, says the position is a dream job. Still, it carries a cost: She's abandoning seniority at her old job. But she thinks the economy is expanding enough that her company will be able to attract state and corporate funding.

"I don't see leaving my current job to pursue this as a risk," Charland says. "I do feel like the economy is getting better, and there's more opportunity out there."

Such optimism was rare in 2008 and 2009, when employers cut more than 8 million jobs, sending the unemployment rate to a 26-year high of 10.1 percent. The number of people who quit fell 40 percent to 1.72 million in September 2009. That was the fewest since the government began tracking the data in 2000. It was down from nearly 2.9 million in December 2007, when the recession began.

Studies have shown that worker morale fell during the recession. Productivity rose as companies squeezed more work out of their employees. That points to a reason quits may keep rising: Overworked employees could jump at the chance to switch jobs as new opportunities arise.

"There is going to be a mass exodus of the top performers as the economy starts to turn around," predicts Razor Suleman, a consultant who helps companies retain their best workers.

About 25 percent of companies' top performers said they plan to leave their current job within a year, according to a survey published in the May edition of the Harvard Business Review. By contrast, in 2006, just 10 percent planned to leave their jobs within a year. The survey questioned 20,000 workers who were identified by their employers as "high potential."

Companies retained those workers during the recession but heaped more work on them, said Jean Martin, the study's co-author and executive director of the Corporate Executive Board's Corporate Leadership Council in Washington. At the same time, employers cut back on awards and bonuses, she said.

Now, top performers at some companies are heading for the exits as hiring picks up. It means companies will feel more pressure to retain them.

"These rising stars know what they're worth," Martin said. "They feel somewhat neglected."

Phil Edelstein can attest to that. He spent two years on his first job at an advertising agency gaining more responsibility but no pay raises.

Edelstein, 25, worked for an agency in Philadelphia that was stretching its budget as clients cut back their spending. After researching clients' brand names and marketing strategies, he moved on to directing study projects.

Bosses kept promising a pay raise commensurate with his workload. It never came.

"There's this intense frustration that comes with that, because you basically feel like you have no control over how much money you're making and how much work you do," he said.

Edelstein hung tight through 2009 as the economy shed jobs. But this year he began sending out resumes to other ad agencies. Then a prospective client called. The CEO of a Colorado-based tea maker needed a marketing director. Edelstein didn't need long to say yes.

"It felt good, because I was initiating the change," he said.

More people are now taking a leap that few dared just a few months ago: Quitting without a new job waiting. The improving economy has given them confidence.

Robert Dixon is among them. He was consulting with companies doing business in China, helping them establish supply chains with factories there. But he tired of spending weeks at a time away from his wife in Massachusetts. So in May he quit – without a backup plan.

"Somebody the other day said to me I was the first person they'd met who quit a good-paying job without another one to go to," Dixon said. "I know there are other companies out there. I just need to find them."

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One sign of better economic times is when more people start finding jobs. Another is when they feel confident enough to quit them. More people quit their jobs in the past three months than were laid ...
One sign of better economic times is when more people start finding jobs. Another is when they feel confident enough to quit them. More people quit their jobs in the past three months than were laid ...
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02:26 AM on 06/16/2010
This article is not lying and I strongly believe it. Why? I am one of those people who quit in April 2010 and part of the statistics mentioned here!

I have worked with a company close to three years and was aching to leave but did not because I was afraid. We had no salary increase for 2009 and in the beginning of this year our employer indicated we could all qualify for salary increases. This gave me some hope for this year. Then, We were told this past April 2010 that no one was getting a raise after all!! I was mad and this did it for me so I quit on 04/22/10....with no other job waiting. I never bought into the whole "bad economy" plague and was confident in my own worth. Now, after searching for another job, I just started working with another company making more money, same travel distance and way BETTER management.

I took matters in my own hands and I made it happen. While I was jobless for almost a month and a half, I refused to read any reports on the "bad" economy because I didn't care to buy it. I think it's time the focus and attention should fall on the employees! We make the business run and we should not let the business run us! It's time we all empower ourselves.
04:20 AM on 06/11/2010
the economy is not improving. people are not quitting their jobs. made up lies.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Grimway
09:10 PM on 06/10/2010
WTF? What closet are you living in?
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Takebackourmoney
07:02 PM on 06/10/2010
I do not know anyone who have voluntarily left a job in the past year or month
04:21 AM on 06/11/2010
me either.
02:39 PM on 06/11/2010
I do, but she hasn't found another and is hurting financially right now.
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02:07 PM on 06/10/2010
Now, just imagine if our access to health care did not depend on us accepting miserable conditions and slave wages - we might actually have an efficient market and entrepreneurism...

Thanks for nothing, Congress.
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07:37 PM on 06/09/2010
This is another story to make it seem like the economy is improving and it's a lame one.
The economy is not improving on solid ground. It can collapse anytime and the small improvement is so small you can barely feel it if there even is one. Once the stimulus and census jobs are done and there are still not at least 500,000 jobs created each month the economy really tanks. We are balancing on the fence. One misstep and .....
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AngelaQuattrano
I just like to write comments
02:07 PM on 06/11/2010
It's a part of the story that says that the only part of the economy that matters is the top 1%.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SUPPERMAN
07:06 PM on 06/09/2010
Employers got you good at this time. Make you work double the workload, insult you, keep you under stress daily. Won't be long and Americans will be like the workers in China,Work long hours for very low pay and be treated like an animal.I think most small business owners have no clue how to be the boss.They do and say whatever they feel like. Im sick of my wife comming home in tears Im not working for the first time in many years. and most have to put up with it, bill to pay!
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weekendpartier
I need some money!
01:49 PM on 06/11/2010
Well, then, why do Americans keep on tolerating this abuse? How come Americans have not supported more unions? Then, the same Americans cry about being over-worked and underpaid after the unions fought for the benefits now enjoyed by most American workers? The irony.
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AngelaQuattrano
I just like to write comments
02:08 PM on 06/11/2010
The American dream is to become one of those small business owners so you can treat other people like dirt and make money off their slave labor, too.
02:42 PM on 06/11/2010
My thought exactly? I'm as angry as anyone about the assault of the middle-class, but it seems most don't care about their situation, or are willing to do anything about it... sooo....?? What then?
06:25 PM on 06/09/2010
why all these conflicting reports about economy on HP everyday? 2 days ago they were saying the number of people unemployed for more than 6 months was too high because economy was poor. Today suddenly the economy is good
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Lisette53
I am the 99%
06:16 PM on 06/09/2010
Yes, well tell us all how the economy is improving while we scramble to survive...THAT WAY, no one has to do anything about the economy or lack of jobs since the problem is apparently just going to take care of itself!
05:21 PM on 06/09/2010
This isn't a surprise. If you have not been happy at a job, there are finally places to go. Among those who are still employed, there is a good deal of pent up demand to move on. Finally, there are places to go. Obviously, there are not enough places to go, but things are improving.
12:23 PM on 06/13/2010
Why would you believe lies?
Mildmannered
"Be excellent to each other"
04:31 PM on 06/09/2010
Employers believed that with unemployment being high that their employees would never leave so they treated them poorly. Now some are actually leaving.
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2garen
04:09 PM on 06/09/2010
There is no way that I believe more people are quitting jobs. I think this might be another dumbing down believe that things are better headline.
05:23 PM on 06/09/2010
I disagree. People are quitting jobs to go to another one. It would have been a more accurate article if they had called it "increased job hopping". If you have a job that you are sick of, there are finally some places to go. This is a normal part of a recovery.
06:04 PM on 06/09/2010
Agree. This is a horrible attempt at spinning something into positive economy news.
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enlightenedgirl
the truth will set you free
03:49 PM on 06/09/2010
I have many problems with all of this. First, quoted was a 27 year old. At 27 you are typically changing jobs to find your dream job. duh.

Many people are still taking early retirement packages. Take it or be laid off later. People are still being bought out and left to find another job, somewhere. Did they quit?
04:28 PM on 06/09/2010
A good point on the latter ... early retirement or voluntary severance packages (VSP). When you take the latter, it is not counted as a layoff and you don't collect unemployment benefits (which count on your employer's ledger). Thanks!

Myself, I was wondering what percentage are salaried workers leaving due to burn-out or ill health. On salary, you're paid the same whether you work 40-60 hours a week pre-recession, or 60-80 or even sometimes 100 hours per week because of the great recession. That is brute force productivity, and the bulk of what we've seen since companies put off updating computer hardware and software until recently (great timing by Microsoft on Windows 7).
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ETAOINSHRDLU
Strapped Socialist
03:28 PM on 06/09/2010
After being saddled with the work of the 4 people they had laid-off, employees are tired of the new employment paradigm. Employers see the advantages to downsizing, and putting unreasonable demands on the remaining employees. Although the recession is not over (although I don't believe it said that anywhere in the article) many employees have reached their breaking points. They are willing to take the risk to attempt to regain their sanity.

I have seen a number of signs posted on businesses saying "No Employment Applications will be taken". Or simple "Not Hiring" signs. I don't recall ever seeing that around here. Usually one would apply at an HR office, and they would tell you "they aren't hiring right now, but fill out an application and we'll keep you on file".

I am not sure if the worst is behind us, but this new employment paradigm is a very dangerous thing. People are going to take more risks in hope of getting that portion of their life back.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Phreaked
In Brightest Day, In Blackest Night
03:35 PM on 06/09/2010
"After being saddled with the work of the 4 people they had laid-off, employees are tired of the new employment paradigm"

I can attest to that, im currently doing the work of 2+ people, and soon to be 3+, and am looking hard for another job. I'm already being paid 30% less than i was before being laid off and at this point wouldnt care if i took another pay cut in order to get better working conditions
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Phreaked
In Brightest Day, In Blackest Night
03:28 PM on 06/09/2010
I dont know about other peoples experience but after being laid off last year and finally, after hundreds of resumes and 9 months, i was able to find a job. This job paid me 30% less than what i made before at 2x+ the workload. Plus i was promised a raise when i started and now all i get when inquiring about it is "we'll see".

Now in the past 2 months i've had several interviews, another being this morning, although no acceptances yet and others waiting to be scheduled.

So i personally have seen the situation improving, but there was also the article stating that employers were not looking for unemployed people so that could be a factor as well