Job Openings Rise For First Time Since April

CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER   09/ 8/10 06:40 PM ET   AP

Were Hiring

WASHINGTON — Job openings are rising modestly, a sign that employers may step up hiring soon.

But rising openings in the past year haven't reduced unemployment, heightening concerns that the unemployed might lack the skills to fill the jobs that are coming available. If companies have openings but can't find qualified workers, that will make it even harder to lower the unemployment rate.

Some economists argue that the broader problem is that the economy just isn't generating enough jobs.

The number of jobs advertised rose by 6.2 percent to 3.04 million in July, according to the Labor Department's latest data. That's the highest total since April, when temporary census hiring inflated that month's figure. But even with the increase, total openings remain far below the 4.4 million that existed in December 2007, when the recession began.

Openings have risen 30 percent since July 2009, when they fell to their lowest level on records dating to 2000. Yet the unemployment rate has actually ticked up during that period, from 9.4 percent a year ago to 9.6 percent last month. Private employers added a net total of only 67,000 jobs in August, the government said Friday. That's below the roughly 100,000 jobs a month the economy needs just to keep up with population growth.

Some analysts say that means factors other than a lack of hiring are keeping the jobless rate high. Workers may not have the expertise the new jobs require. Or falling home prices may make it harder for the unemployed to sell their homes and move to where jobs are available.

Narayana Kocherlakota, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, said such mismatches could account for as much as 2.5 percentage points of the unemployment rate.

"Firms have jobs but can't find appropriate workers," he said in a speech Wednesday in Missoula, Mont. "The workers want to work, but can't find appropriate jobs."

This limits what the central bank can do to reduce unemployment, Kocherlakota said. In a similar speech last month, he said. "The Fed does not have a means to transform construction workers into manufacturing workers."

Many private recruiters say they are having a hard time finding the right people for jobs that are available. A survey by the Corporate Executive Board of company recruiters found that most are struggling to hire qualified jobseekers. More than 80 percent said that fewer than half their applicants are qualified, even though the number of unemployed has surged since the recession began.

That's partly because many of those who have lost their jobs in the downturn are relatively low-skilled, according to Jean Martin, an executive director at the Corporate Executive Board. Those with a high school education or less have a higher unemployment rate than those with college degrees. And the gap widened during the downturn.

Some economists say the skills and geographic mismatches aren't the biggest obstacle for jobseekers. The overall weakness of the economy is the main problem, they say.

"The same pattern has been seen in previous downturns," said Lawrence Katz, a Harvard economist. "When the economy starts growing again ... firms start taking chances on people and training them."

Competition for job openings, in the meantime, remains fierce. About 4.8 unemployed people, on average, are competing for each opening, Wednesday's report shows, compared with about 1.8 before the recession.

The report, known as the Job Openings and Labor Turnover survey, illustrates how much job churn the U.S. economy experiences each month: Companies and government agencies, including the Census Bureau, hired 4.2 million people in July. At the same time, 4.4 million people were laid off, quit or retired that month.

Total hiring remains weak and is down from a monthly total of 5 million people in December 2007. Layoffs, meanwhile, have risen moderately for the past two months but are still at pre-recession levels, the report shows.

"It is the lack of hiring that largely accounts for the 'recession feeling' in the job market," said Henry Mo, an economist at Credit Suisse.

Among industries, education and health services and leisure and hospitality showed the biggest increases in job openings.

The education and health sectors posted 533,000 jobs in July, up from 487,000 the previous month. Restaurants and hotels advertised 310,000 openings, up from 263,000.

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WASHINGTON — Job openings are rising modestly, a sign that employers may step up hiring soon. But rising openings in the past year haven't reduced unemployment, heightening concerns that the un...
WASHINGTON — Job openings are rising modestly, a sign that employers may step up hiring soon. But rising openings in the past year haven't reduced unemployment, heightening concerns that the un...
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06:53 PM on 09/09/2010
I was recently contacted by a prospective employer who had interviewed me in July of '09. I have had more interviews in the past two months than in the prior eight months. I am sick of being unemployed for so long, demoralizing at times...
03:43 PM on 09/09/2010
These guys are fishing in the wrong watering hole. The reason unemployment went up is because more people started looking for work. There's no way that companies can't find the right people to do the job because of a lack of skills. There are 15 million people out of work. Choose one!
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Lilli917
a little peace and quiet please.
12:58 PM on 09/09/2010
Today we are having new siding put on the upper level of our house. We are using the concrete fiber type and since it is rather expensive we spent some time choosing the contractor. We hired a company that has a long history in this area and that was recommended by "Angie's List".
This morning, before my husband left, he asked me if I would remind them to caulk the guttering on one corner of the house. When they arrived, I went out to ask them about that and there is not a soul out there that speaks a word of English. They just smile at me and shake their head.
I might as well be in another country trying to get something done!
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raleigh1997
Oh no officer, I forgot my papers and/or ID!
01:22 PM on 09/09/2010
Let's see, this company from your research, appears to do a good job, and because the workers lack the ability to speak English, you have a problem with their work? Bigot much lady?
04:00 PM on 09/09/2010
If you speak one language and the worker speaks a different language, how do you expect them to do what you ask? It's not about being a bigot.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carlariz
01:26 PM on 09/09/2010
Who cares.... go cry to some conservative website, stop your mongering... Your post has nothing to do with the article!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pj-smith
solidarity with OWS
09:46 AM on 09/09/2010
Oh, and these jobs...there are many in my area too...they pay less than 10 bucks an hour. 400. bucks a week...20,000 a year? When you have to buy your own health insurance and your rent is 900. a month, at the low end? These jobs aren't viable options....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vippy
Carpe Diem!
05:50 AM on 09/09/2010
And in dire times like these, customers are the most difficult to deal with, because they want everything for free, not that you can blame them, but they are so demanding, even unreal and you are to kiss their behinds or get fired.  Don't expect management to back you up.  The customer is not always right, they lie their way into something free!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vippy
Carpe Diem!
05:48 AM on 09/09/2010
What most people are unaware of that retail and food facilities only hire in the lntermitent category,
not full time, not part time but 3 to 19 hour category with no benefits.  How is that supposed to pay for your transportation, licensing, registration, insurance, gas and living expenses?
09:53 PM on 09/08/2010
I am seeing may more positions requiring both experience and education. If companies want to grow their busiesses they will need to hire the people with the talent to do just that.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vippy
Carpe Diem!
05:51 AM on 09/09/2010
and offer a pay that goes along with it!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
weekendpartier
I need some money!
07:17 PM on 09/08/2010
WOW! Really? Gee thanks Target/Best Buy/Kmart/Sears/Walmart!! Now I can afford to buy my own house (in Bolivia)!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
judiNJ
The Free Market is Not Free
05:04 PM on 09/08/2010
And big business sits on it tons of cash and hold off hiring until after the November elections.
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graffitijoe
snowballs chance n SoCal
07:42 AM on 09/09/2010
...or is it until they find out how much their taxes will be going up in January, or how much they are going to be effected by HCR in the next couple of years?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
novo organon
05:00 PM on 09/08/2010
Put Money into the pockets of the working stiff, not thirteen dollars more in their weekly paychecks, and they will spend because they have wishes and desires that need to be fulfilled. The products will fly off the shelves, creating a huge demand for goods and services and labor. Rocket science we leave up to Michio Kaku !
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JavaManiac
...with liberty and justice for all
04:43 PM on 09/08/2010
No one seems to care about this. Why?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rdiaz921
02:03 AM on 09/09/2010
it's buried - not on the main.
04:40 PM on 09/08/2010
Wow, a job at a grocery store paying 8 bucks an hour and will only give 20 hours per week. Let's all dance in the streets!! The recession is over!!!!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tisfilm
04:24 PM on 09/08/2010
GOP hat.e jobs..
03:18 PM on 09/08/2010
OK 99'ers.. what's your excuse now?
03:58 PM on 09/08/2010
Yeah, just what a out of work for 3 years former Senior mainframe software programmer/analyst wants, a 12 hour a week, $7.50 and hour job 20 miles away. Been there done that, no thank you.
04:27 PM on 09/08/2010
then don't ask for handouts from those who will do that.
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JavaManiac
...with liberty and justice for all
04:44 PM on 09/08/2010
3 years??? You have to be joking. A lot of the software firms I consult for are hiring. You have no excuse.
04:43 PM on 09/08/2010
Until you lived this....you have no idea what you are talking about....sc300nc.
02:59 PM on 09/08/2010
there will be a small bump in hirings over the next 2 months with seasonal Christmas (I'll probably get flagged for saying that) hirings in retail. at least it puts people back to work for a while.
04:41 PM on 09/08/2010
OMG....you said.....Christmas!!! Yikes!! And it got through!!! Yikes!! The HP police must be at Dunkin Donuts on a coffee break!!

No way this get's through. They don't have the guts!!