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U.S. Economy Growing Faster Than Rivals, But Creating Far Fewer Jobs

Growth Jobs

PAUL WISEMAN   03/31/11 10:43 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — The United States is out of step with the rest of the world's richest industrialized nations: Its economy is growing faster than theirs but creating far fewer jobs.

The reason is U.S. workers have become so productive that it's harder for anyone without a job to get one.

Companies are producing and profiting more than when the recession began, despite fewer workers. They're hiring again, but not fast enough to replace most of the 7.5 million jobs lost since the recession began.

Measured in growth, the American economy has outperformed those of Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan – every Group of 7 developed nation except Canada, according to The Associated Press' new Global Economy Tracker, a quarterly analysis of 22 countries representing more than 80 percent of global output.

Yet the U.S. job market remains the group's weakest. U.S. employment bottomed and started growing again a year ago, but there are still 5.4 percent fewer American jobs than in December 2007. That's a much sharper drop than in any other G-7 country. The U.S. had the G-7's highest unemployment rate as of December.

Canada and Germany have actually added jobs since the recession ended in June 2009.

U.S. companies aren't acting the way economists had expected them to.

In the past, when the U.S. economy fell into recession, companies typically cut jobs but often kept more than they needed. Some might have felt protective of their staffs. Or they didn't want to risk losing skilled employees they'd need once business rebounded.

Among manufacturers, for example, some tended to hoard workers during downturns by giving them make-work assignments – sweeping factory floors, counting inventory, painting warehouses.

The result is that productivity – output per workers – has typically decelerated or even dropped as the economy has weakened.

Japan and Europe have been following that script. At the depth of the recession in 2009, productivity shrank 3.7 percent in Japan and 2.2 percent in Europe.

The United States has proved the exception. U.S. productivity growth doubled from 2008 to 2009, then doubled again in 2010, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Panicked by the 2008 financial crisis and deepening recession, U.S. employers cut jobs pitilessly. They slashed an average of 780,000 jobs a month in the January-March quarter of 2009.

"My sense is there was much more weeding out of the weakest workers – the ones they didn't want," says Harvard economist Kenneth Rogoff.

Yet after shrinking payrolls, many companies found they could produce just as much with fewer workers. And with that higher productivity came higher profits. By July-September quarter of 2010, U.S. corporate earnings were 12 percent more than when the recession began.

By contrast, corporate profits fell 6 percent in Japan and 16 percent in Canada from the October-December quarter of 2007, according to Haver Analytics.

In Reading, Pennsylvania, Remcon Plastics moved fast once sales evaporated in the fall of 2008.

"I have never seen my business go so quiet," says Peter Connors, founder of the company, which makes pharmaceutical equipment. "I recognized that business wasn't going to be strong for some time."

So he laid off 25 temporary workers. And he put his 50 full-time employees on a three-day workweek.

Remcon rethought how it did business – restructuring the workplace, for example, so employees didn't have to walk as far to do their tasks. A plastic part that once had to be made by six workers now needs three. It can be produced faster.

"So even as demand came back, we could wait to add people," Connors says.

Japanese, European and Canadian companies are less inclined to purge employees. Their customs, labor regulations and unions discourage aggressive layoffs.

U.S. management practices "make it easier for employers to avoid adding permanent jobs," says economist Erica Groshen, a vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. "They have temporary help they can hire easily. They're less constrained by traditional human resources practices or by union contracts."

Fewer than 12 percent of American workers belong to unions, which provide some protection against job cuts. That's the fourth-lowest union participation rate among 31 countries the OECD tracks.

"When there's pressure to cut costs in the United States, it's borne by the workers," says Howard Rosen, visiting fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. "In Europe, it's borne differently."

In Germany, unemployment is lower now than before the recession. To limit layoffs, German companies spread the pain by reducing workers' hours.

"Japanese companies took it upon themselves to paint the factory – do more stuff that kept people on the payroll," says Gary Burtless, senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution.

That helps explain why Japan's unemployment rate was the lowest among G-7 countries in December at just 4.9 percent, though it may rise after the earthquake and nuclear disaster that struck Japan's northeastern coastline.

The United States is "on the other end of the spectrum," says Carl Van Horn, director of the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers University.

"Everything is tilted in favor of the employers... The employee has no leverage. If your boss says, `I want you to come in the next two Saturdays,' what are you going to say – no?"

____

AP Business Writer Pallavi Gogoi in New York contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — The United States is out of step with the rest of the world's richest industrialized nations: Its economy is growing faster than theirs but creating far fewer jobs. The reason is U...
WASHINGTON — The United States is out of step with the rest of the world's richest industrialized nations: Its economy is growing faster than theirs but creating far fewer jobs. The reason is U...
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05:11 AM on 04/02/2011
If businesses are unwilling to create jobs HERE, then we need to take a page from FDR's playbook. The CCC camp.

People gotta eat and have a roof.
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RinTinTim
10:38 AM on 04/01/2011
"Unemployment Rate Falls Again In March As Job Growth Picks Up"

All thanks to the leadership of President Obama!! NO THANKS to the do nothing republicans.
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Silverpegasus
02:13 PM on 04/01/2011
I, for one, do NOT believe those government unemployment numbers for one second!
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RinTinTim
10:37 AM on 04/01/2011
Good morning.
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wikwox
So there I was, playing the piano....
07:41 AM on 04/01/2011
Perhaps U.S.A. job growth lags because European and Japanese politicians are not cheer leaders for imports and job outsourcing. Politicians in this country routinely and brazenly declare corporations must be allowed to do whatever they like to remain "competitive". What they really are saying is Tough Luck Unemployd And Under Employed. Jobs and income for you don't matter while corporations profits are soaring.
01:38 AM on 04/01/2011
"Yet after shrinking payrolls, many companies found they could produce just as much with fewer workers." (Wow, really?? How amazing that they just suddenly had this eureka moment) "And with that higher productivity came higher profits. By July-September quarter of 2010, U.S. corporate earnings were 12 percent more than when the recession began."

Yep and with jobless rates remaining high, terror of the the pink slip reigns in the employed workforce. The slowly tightening corporate grip on the short hairs of the American worker is playing out beautifully. Just pile more and more on the workers' backs, all the while dodging taxes and whining about the "hostile" business environment in the US, especially as compared to China and India where, after all, you can just set up shop and pay the workers $.25 an hour.
10:25 PM on 03/31/2011
Interesting posts. Norway is what I want Canada to become. You get what you pay for. Americans in general I find to be a nice and hardworking lot, love the people. My personal opinion is Americans are so much more productive than any group of people in the world is because Americans do not take any vacations, fiercely independent and just a little bit self serving. probably because of your pioneering history. Americans need to take more time off and smell the flowers.I've travelled quite a bit and this is the general consensus. What blows me away is Americans are the most generous people in the world, name a crisis and generally the Americans are the first one there, however when taking care of their own not so much. Why? I consider this one of the mysteries of the modern era.
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Silverpegasus
02:19 PM on 04/01/2011
We Americans are wondering that also, Kit Hay. Why are so many of us so unwilling to help the downtrodden American's? Doesn't make sense to me! I've found that those American's who have little are doing so much more to help others than the American's that have a lot. Take the recent "Sharing Pledge" of the worlds richest people (Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, etc.) They are donating a large portion of their wealth to charities, but mostly to charities that help people in OTHER countries, NOT to charities that help American's.
08:26 PM on 03/31/2011
I can't help suspecting that GOP controlled industries are making a great effort to avoid hiring in order to avoid the chance of an Obama success.
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CharlesW299
I could take offence, but that would make no sense
03:22 PM on 04/01/2011
No, everyone is aware of the economy and don’t want to be the one to test any theory.
Large component of profits are because of cutting out traditional overhead costs - things like face-to-face meetings, travel expenses, on-site type training, sales conferences etc.

They are not thinking of Obama, they are ALL trying to use it as a tool to somewhat ahead of the pack.
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johnminehan
07:59 PM on 03/31/2011
"The reason is U.S. workers have become so productive that it's harder for anyone without a job to get one."

HMMMMM. These kind of statistics are usually signs the data are screwed up or the assumptions are wrong.
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Stewart Goss
Evil requires the sanction of the victim -Ayn Rand
07:43 PM on 03/31/2011
I opened up my book on liberal mythology today.

Chapter 2 was on class warfare and had this quote:

"While the rich get richer the poor get poorer."

By earning more you don't take from others, you create wealth. Something that marxists and their "piece of the pie" mentality can't even grasp.
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paulita
Progress is an evolutionary process
08:11 PM on 03/31/2011
Then where are the jobs Stewy?
08:52 PM on 03/31/2011
"By earning more, you don't take from others, you create wealth." Uhuh... riiiiiight. And how are the companies earning more? By getting more out of their workers and giving them less in return. And if they are creating wealth, how come all statistics (has nothing to do with a piece of the pie mentality, as you put it) from the past 30 years show that the rich are getting ever richer while the middle class and poor are getting poorer? Explain that. Statistics or mythology? Let the ones with clear minds decide.
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LazarusRises
Tax The Rich, Feed The Poor!!
09:03 PM on 03/31/2011
Trickle Down Economics...of course. Cept they misstated exactly WHAT was to trickle down on everyone.
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gravityhunter
Lock, wave n pull
07:03 PM on 03/31/2011
You'll take it if he doesn't want it? YOU are the problem...
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omega777
Yellow cake is the Bomb
06:56 PM on 03/31/2011
The real Cost of War for America both the war in Iraq and Afghanistan has a cost of 3 trillion each , was it really worth it for the American tax payers who are going to fork the money out ?
The war against Libya will cost billions , with that kind of money America could have fixed the social security problem for the next 50 years , or could have fixed roads and bridges etc....
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jamenta
There are other human values besides greed.
07:03 PM on 03/31/2011
It seems Obama is more interested in saving other countries rather than our own.

And the Republicans are simply more interested in lining their own pockets.
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LazarusRises
Tax The Rich, Feed The Poor!!
09:04 PM on 03/31/2011
You are correct except we could have fixed Social Security &&&&&&& rebuilt our infrastructure.
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omega777
Yellow cake is the Bomb
06:47 PM on 03/31/2011
Sheep - work more, get less, never protest
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desert bloom
06:48 PM on 03/31/2011
Go get another job. Heck, I'll take it if you don't want it.
07:04 PM on 03/31/2011
Like he said, sheep.
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jamenta
There are other human values besides greed.
07:05 PM on 03/31/2011
I'm sure many Americans would if they really had the choice you pretend they have.

The fact is - which you deliberately ignore - is that for every job available currently in this country - there are 5 unemployed Americans.

You do the math. I'm sure you can.
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desert bloom
06:43 PM on 03/31/2011
Gas prices have doubled since Obama took office. This is not helpful.
07:02 PM on 03/31/2011
did Obama raise the prices? I don't think so
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paulita
Progress is an evolutionary process
08:12 PM on 03/31/2011
Part of the birther conspiracy I'm sure.