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Job Openings Tumble In November

CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER   01/11/11 05:13 PM ET   AP

Job Openings

WASHINGTON — Companies planning to ramp up hiring this year will have an added luxury: their choice from a flood of applicants, without having to pay a premium for top talent.

Unemployment remains near double digits, and there are nearly five unemployed workers competing for each available job. That is giving employers more confidence, while at the same time enabling them to keep wages low.

The lack of opportunities over the past three years means it's risky for jobseekers to be choosy, particularly for those who have been out of work for more than six months. All that makes for a buyers' market, leaving hiring managers with little incentive to negotiate.

"They don't have to pay higher wages to get who they want," Heidi Shierholz, an economist at the liberal Economic Policy Institute.

Employers advertised 3.25 million jobs in November, the Labor Department said Tuesday. That's 39 percent higher than the number of jobs advertised in July 2009, a month after the recession ended. But it's still far below the 4.4 million openings posted in December 2007, when the downturn began.

Perhaps more important is the number of people competing for those jobs. With 15 million unemployed in November, the ratio was 4.6 unemployed workers for every open job. The ratio reached 6.3 in November 2009, the highest since the department began tracking job openings in December 2000. Still, in a healthy economy, it would fall to between 1.5 and 2, economists say.

Those figures don't factor in under-employed workers or people with jobs who may test the hiring waters.

While openings are up 39 percent from the low point during the recession, monthly hiring has risen only 4 percent to 4.2 million in the same period.

"It is disappointing that 17 months into the recovery, the hires rate still remained at depressed levels," said Henry Mo, an economist at Credit Suisse.

Economists don't agree on the reasons for the gap. Some say the unemployed lack the right skills for the available jobs. Others cite the housing slump, which makes it harder for those out of work to sell their homes and relocate to take a job.

Shierholz said the sheer number of applications from the vast pool of unemployed, and a more demanding attitude from employers could partly explain the delays.

Companies "think they should be able to get perfect, super-qualified workers for very cheap," she said.

Wages and salaries rose only 1.5 percent in the 12 months ending last September, according to the latest government figures. That's barely ahead of the 1.1 percent rise in inflation over the same period.

The good news for jobseekers is that economists expect a lot more openings in the months ahead. Some are projecting more than double the 1.1 million jobs added in 2010.

Ford Motor Co. said Monday that it will add more than 7,000 workers in the next two years, including 750 engineers to work on hybrid and electric vehicles. Discount-store operator Dollar General Corp. said last week that it will open 625 stores and hire more than 6,000 workers in 2011.

And Union Pacific, the nation's largest railroad, plans to hire as many as 4,000 people this year.

The company is seeking diesel mechanics, track workers, conductors and engineers. Most of the new hires will replace workers who are retiring or leaving, but about 1,000 will be new positions.

Already, the company is seeing plenty of interest.

"Many applicants not only meet but exceed the qualifications needed," said Tom Lange, a spokesman. "Overall, it's a very strong applicant pool."

Spirit AeroSystems, an aircraft parts manufacturer, plans to hire about 200 people in the first three months of this year, for its plants in Wichita, Kans. and Tulsa, Okla. The company is ramping up its operations in preparation for stronger orders from Boeing, one of its main customers, according to Ken Evans, a spokesman.

The company is seeing a lot of qualified applicants, Evans said. Other aircraft manufacturers, such as Cessna and Lear Jet, have gone bankrupt in recent years.

"We don't anticipate any problems filling these positions," he said.

The department's report, known as the Job Openings and Labor Turnover survey, or JOLTS, counts the number of jobs advertised on the last business day of the month. While the figures are for November, economists say the report provides an early indication of hiring patterns because it can take up to three months to fill many jobs.

The figures come after the department issued a disappointing employment report Friday stating that employers added only 103,000 jobs in December. Some economists had forecast that twice that number would be added. The unemployment rate fell to 9.4 percent from 9.8 percent, though about half that drop was due to people giving up on job searches.

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WASHINGTON — Companies planning to ramp up hiring this year will have an added luxury: their choice from a flood of applicants, without having to pay a premium for top talent. Unemployment rema...
WASHINGTON — Companies planning to ramp up hiring this year will have an added luxury: their choice from a flood of applicants, without having to pay a premium for top talent. Unemployment rema...
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texastrixie
I invented the internet.
02:52 AM on 01/13/2011
Doesn't anybody get it? Dollar General opening 625 new stores is BAD economic news, not good. This means that Dollar General expects its pool of customers - those too poor to even shop at Walmart - will continue to grow over the next few years. Dollar General is betting, that though the economy may be improviing, the lot of the average American will not. Sure there will be more jobs, low-paying, scut jobs, but yes, there will be jobs.
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11:51 AM on 01/13/2011
You have nailed it texast! F&F for forsight and common sense!
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Acharn
07:51 PM on 01/12/2011
'Companies "think they should be able to get perfect, super-qualified workers for very cheap," she said.'

Corporate profits are at an all time high. The rich are using this crisis to erase gains made since 1934, as well as destroying Social Security. Capitalism needs "an army of unemployed" to keep wages down. Workers must be kept barely above starvation level to maintain profit levels. While the plutocrats were terrified of Communism they allowed workers some small comfort to blind them to their vulnerability, but since the end of the Cold War the corporatists don't feel the need to hide their real goals any more.
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kemcha
Advocate for the 99ers
09:35 AM on 01/12/2011
The problem is that our country is slowly deteriorating. Not only can't Congress fix the problem of getting companies to create jobs and but that we'll continue bleeding jobs until there are none left. Businesses and investors are slowly starting to abandon the United States and not even all of the good will of President Obama will be able to patch up that hole.

President Obama may have good intentions but there's nothing he can do. He can only create policy, he cannot create jobs. Companies will continue hoarding their money because they won't hire until consumers start spending money. Consumers don't have money to spend because they have no jobs. So what happens now?

Companies continue to invest in jobs overseas and they're using our tax dollars, given to them by Congress, to create these jobs overseas. An article, a few weeks ago, highlighted the fact that U.S. companies who received tax breaks (not the recently passed bill, so don't quote that) were using our tax dollars to create more than 1,100 jobs overseas.

This is what Congress has created, Republicans and Democrats alike, and we're going to end up becoming a third world country.
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LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
12:18 AM on 01/12/2011
As soon as companies start hiring again the big banks will just close down credit forcing more companies out of business.
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Kat Posing
Logical Rational Practical Common Sense
11:18 PM on 01/11/2011
The reason for depressed hiring numbers is obvious. America lost 8 million jobs. Jobs that'll never coming back because many companies went out of business, while the remaining have reduced their workforces to bare-bones lean. Those hired are significantly over qualified, and taking less pay because they need to pay the bills. (See yesterdays article on Wages Dropping in HP), or new graduates and cheap. A couple thousand jobs here and there are doing very little to replace the jobs lost, so unemployment will remain above 9% for a while. It's simple Econ101-Supply and Demand. Big supply of available workers, low demand for workers means lowering wages.

The solution to the problem's also simple Econ101. Reduce the incentives for businesses to keep cash on their books in the form of near zero interest loans, that earns interest while it sits in the bank, as well as tax incentives to either outsource jobs or hiring in cheaper foreign labor.

When it's more cost effective to hire American workers instead of holding cash or hiring outside the country, companies will hire American workers again. But with the current partnership between Republicans and Business for reducing taxes and regulation, we will continue to see this trend with lowering wages and fewer jobs in America. This partnership will continue to degrade America's economy with the reduced business spending cycle because it throws us into deflation and eventually full depression. But multinationals corporations won't care-They'll simply move to a new country.
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MikeyJaii
Socialism.
10:55 PM on 01/11/2011
The media play tricks on us, first the rates are all good and steady then it's all shaky and we're doomed.
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Mr MOTO
Three Strikes And You're Not Out!
10:30 AM on 01/13/2011
Consumer Confidence is a self-fulfilling prophecy ... driven by the media. That's why there is always some level of economic downturn during election years and, especially, where an 8 year president is concerned.
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Arts4u
It's better than a reality show.
10:31 PM on 01/11/2011
This is NOT a recovery until all of the people who lost their jobs are back at work in full-time jobs at the salary they were making before the downturn. Anyone who tells you that anything less than that is benefiting from it. Shame on them.
02:22 AM on 01/12/2011
"at the salary they were making before the downturn." LMAO! Well, that ain't happening anytime soon. What do you think they crashed the economy for in the first place? haha!
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Arts4u
It's better than a reality show.
01:21 PM on 01/12/2011
We all know what they were, and they had nothing to do with 95% of the people who were effected badly. Yet, aside from a few heads rolling, the whole process continues....
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spinotter11
Spinning through life and trying to understand it.
01:00 PM on 01/12/2011
There is an economic definition of recession and recovery (no more recession) and we have been out of the GDP recession since June, 2009. This is our jobless recovery because it meets the definition of recovery without jobs! You can't just redefine the term recovery, which depends on those GDP numbers only. I agree that the country is still is p$sspoor shape.
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Arts4u
It's better than a reality show.
01:27 PM on 01/12/2011
As 2003 was a 'jobless' recovery. Though this one is far too large to be ignored and we are being irresponsible towards those that continue to be effected if we simply just chalk it up to being 'part of the deal'. I'm sorry - we do have a responsibility to those who are around us. And no, no business person that I talk to claims that we are in ANY kind of recovery... what we are in, is the resumed domination by large corporations.
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Simon Byrd
08:56 PM on 01/11/2011
If only there were large numbers of hiring managers out of work.
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Arts4u
It's better than a reality show.
10:31 PM on 01/11/2011
They are the worst, aren't they?
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Hdaryl01
02:08 AM on 01/12/2011
Funny you mention this, there is a Frontline show that details unemployment on New York upper east side. One of those featured was a big time VP of Human Resources. One of those nameless, contactless, soulless individuals who don't read your resumes, don't even respond to your resumes, don't forward your resumes on to an actual person, run your resume through scanning software, and can't bother to even tell you the job was filled, by someone other than you. More of these folks need to hit the bricks, if for no other reason than to gain a little empathy.
06:32 PM on 01/11/2011
Employers are taking their sweet time filling their "open" positions.
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spinotter11
Spinning through life and trying to understand it.
01:01 PM on 01/12/2011
They are free to hire or not hire as they like. Would you prefer that the government force them to hire?
01:17 PM on 01/12/2011
No, I would prefer them to NOT post any positions until they are READY to hire! Stringing desperate people along for months is freakin' ANNOYING!!!!!!!!!
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Arts4u
It's better than a reality show.
10:25 PM on 01/12/2011
I would prefer that the largest (who can afford to hire) would step up to the plate and contribute to healing the economy.
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Malcolm Hensley
Last of the Reagan Republicans
05:44 PM on 01/11/2011
As I see it we need a new coalition. This coalition should be made up of environmentalist, minorities, and lastly many Tea Party members.
I know this seems like an odd coalitions but think about it we all want a green environment, we all want jobs. Most of the votes from the Tea Party members are just working class folks like the rest of us worried about their future! The minorities in this free trade economy have been hurt the worst. When factories close here it takes minorities much longer to find a new job! And finally the Green Party members.
How do we get all 3 of these very different groups together. With Green Tariffs everyone gets their wish! Small and medium companies start to produce products here so Tea Party members get the job security they want, minorities get jobs instead of having a 1 in 4 chance of going to jail! And the Green Party members get a much cleaner world!
This is a populist movement that could make the lobbyist irrelevant! Because at the end of the day it's about the votes!
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Arts4u
It's better than a reality show.
10:34 PM on 01/11/2011
Nice but don't Tea Party members love oil? Tea Party was funded by Koch Brothers, biggest oil guys in the world. Also, define minorities...
05:29 PM on 01/11/2011
Look, if Wal-Mart pushes all their suppliers overseas, then start treating them like a foreign company. If the only Americas in that company are the board and the stockholders, then it's not a US Company and shouldn't be treated as one. On the other hand, if a company like Toyota or Kia is putting up factories in the U.S. and giving Americans jobs, then treat that branch like an American company complete with any tax breaks etc...
07:23 PM on 01/11/2011
Legally, where they are incorporated is all that matters.
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Arts4u
It's better than a reality show.
10:35 PM on 01/11/2011
Change the rules.
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04:51 PM on 01/11/2011
We're stuck in a situation, where out desperate leaders are giving all our money to private corporations, who are exporting jobs. They don't care about America. They want their silly "global system".
07:14 PM on 01/11/2011
Right. "Global system" just means "lowest wages possible."
04:36 PM on 01/11/2011
If the United States would classify unemployed people as employed, we could get rid of unemployment. But, no, instead the US continues to rely upon outdated classifications that link employment to jobs.
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04:52 PM on 01/11/2011
I suspect they'll try it. Like they did with inflation.
http://newsflavor.com/opinions/five-steps-to-rebuild-america/
04:21 PM on 01/11/2011
This situation will never again improve. I have a bad feeling that wages are going to continue to go down as the shortages in jobs increase. Remember most of the good paying manufacturing jobs have gone to Asia, while at the same time our wealth is not distributed in a fair way. The average citizen is much worse off than they were 25 to 30 years ago. America is going over the cliff, and it seems that the politicians continue to favor the most wealthy. WE ARE THROUGH!!!
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04:52 PM on 01/11/2011
You're right. But we can protect ourselves.
http://bizcovering.com/business/silver-dreams/
05:19 PM on 01/11/2011
Just look at the smear campaign against unions and public jobs right now. When the general public is naively lapping up the right-wing propaganda and turning against unions & people who do important work, get benefits, fair pay, and retirement, we are indeed going down a horrific spiral with no hope of coming out.
08:32 PM on 01/11/2011
These are words I thought would never say, I never believed in unions before BUT if corporations are going to keep abusing the middle class and poor maybe I should rethink things. My father-in law is a retired truck driver, and he lives quite comfortably, and was a member of the union for around 40 years.
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DevRock
03:44 PM on 01/11/2011
Employers have gotten used to using FEAR in this economy and have no shame letting people go and dumping that extra work on the people remaining for no boost in pay. My company, while "small", does this all the time. People leave for one reason or another and they don't re-hire and dump the extra work on someone else. And every once in a while we're told "you're lucky to have a job..." It's very condescending and makes me furious. But, if/when things turn around, I think a lot of companies are going to be shocked by the exodus out their doors. We can only hope.
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04:54 PM on 01/11/2011
The only way to beat this is to produce locally, buy locally and spend sensibly. Put these greedy sods out of business.
http://bizcovering.com/business/silver-dreams/
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dporterdvd
Progressives won 1890-1920. Time to win again.
06:11 PM on 01/11/2011
I sympathize with you completely. At my last full time job, the extra work over time made me come in earlier, work through lunch, stay late and come in on weekends for the same pay I used to make working only 40 hours per week. I just sucked it up for a few years but the job burnout turned into depression and exhaustion and I finally had to choose mental & physical health over economic health and leave. Unfortunately, my departure probably caused even more work to be divided onto my remaining co-workers. It reminds me of being on the Survivor reality show except there is no million dollar incentive.