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College Seniors Finding Jobs More Easily As Companies Step Up Hiring

College Seniors Jobs

First Posted: 04/01/2012 7:59 am Updated: 06/01/2012 5:12 am


By Jilian Mincer and Jennifer Merritt

NEW YORK, April 1(Reuters) - Sean Chua expected the hunt for his first job after college to be tough. After all, he watched his brother struggle to find a position when he graduated back in 2008. But his fears were unwarranted. The 21-year-old justice major at American University sent out only seven resumes before getting an offer earlier this month from IBM for an IT consulting job, making him a beneficiary of a turnaround in the labor market for U.S. graduates. "My mom's first position was with IBM so she is particularly proud," says Chua. Hiring is back in a big way on many college campuses, one of several signs a recovery in the U.S. jobs market is gaining traction. After four years during which many students graduated to find no job and had only their loans to show for their studies, most college campuses are teeming with companies eager to hire. A survey by the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE) found 2012 hiring is expected to climb 10.2 percent, above a previous estimate of 9.5 percent.

Companies such as General Electric, Amazon, Apple and Barclays Global are looking for new staff, even if some firms remain below the pre-recession levels of new hiring. In another sign of the recovery, some first-time job seekers are receiving multiple offers. At University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, the career service office has seen up to now a 7.4 percent increase in the number of interviews of students by potential employers from last year and the number of companies seeking to recruit for full-time jobs is up 9.2 percent. Undergraduate business majors reporting full-time job offers is up about 10 percent. Career experts at a dozen of U.S. schools said they have seen an increase of 15 to 30 percent in the number of companies attending campus career fairs. At University of Florida, the fall career fair garnered 15 percent more companies in attendance than in 2010. And 150 companies asked to conduct interviews versus about 100 in recent years, said Ja'Net Glover, associate director of employer relations at the school. The increase in demand was so significant that it was the first time in years the school had to use both the first and second floors of the school's basketball facility for interviews.

"It's kind of like a no-brainer," says Kathy Sims. Director of Career Services at UCLA. "The economy is better and the college recruitment market is improving." While the U.S. jobless rate fell to 8.3 percent in February, unemployment among college graduates over the age of 25 stood at 4.2 percent. Historically, their jobless rate is half that of Americans with only a high school education. Over the recession, unemployment among graduates climbed as high as 5 percent, sparking protests over the rising tuition cost of some U.S. colleges. U.S. unemployment data for March, due for release on April 6, is expected to show a total of just over 200,000 jobs were created in the month, keeping the overall unemployment rate at 8.3 percent.

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----------------------------------------------------------- BACKLOG FROM PAST YEARS, INTERNS SOAR College graduates' earnings are also on the rebound. NACE says the median wage for first-time job seekers after college for 2012 is up 4.5 percent higher than a year ago to $42,569.

That initial pay level can resonate over the span of a career. Several studies show that the life-time earnings for workers who enter the labor force at time of economic recession are lower than lifetime earnings of those who are hired amid an economic recovery. Given the tepid recovery of the economy, some caution is required. In 2008, many college graduates who had already accepted job offers were later away. After the run of lean years, many graduates are stuck in low-paying jobs and professions that never intended to follow, meaning there could be a backlog of well-educated workers who need to get their careers on track as well as new graduates. However, with a wide range of employers -- from automakers to investment banks -- back on campus offering internships and full-time jobs, and not just to engineering, computer science and math majors, the outlook for the Class of 2012 looks rosy.

General Electric wants to hire 5,000 interns this year, up from its usual 3,000 to 4,000. Since 70 percent of its full-time hires come from the interns pool, Steve Canale, head of global recruiting, said that uptick will also translate into more full-time jobs after graduation. "(Companies) are saying, 'we have an aging workforce, and we have to replenish the pipeline.' GE has always done it, but this year a lot of other companies are also reloading their talent pool," Canale said.

Chrysler said it plans to hire 400 interns this year compared to 256 in 2011. The automaker has also hired almost 4,000 salaried employees since June 2009, about a quarter of which are new college graduates. The pick-up in hiring extends to industries that were among the hardest hit during the financial crisis. Schools report that banking and financial services companies have returned to campus for the Class of 2012.

It's a stark contrast from just a few years ago when smaller firms appeared on campuses to replace the corporations no longer showing up.

"Even students with lower grades are finding opportunities," says Notre Dame's Svete, who believes job placement at the school is up about 7 percent. In 2009, only 75 percent of students had jobs or plans for graduate school at graduation. This year, the school expects that to climb to 85 to 88 percent, closer to the 90 percent level of 2007.

Nathan Pace, a senior at American University, hasn't yet found a job, but is confident for his future job. He started the college four years ago and he has since seen each class of graduating seniors have better luck finding jobs. Many of his friends recently secured job offers. "The vibe on campus is that people are excited," says Pace.

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By Jilian Mincer and Jennifer Merritt NEW YORK, April 1(Reuters) - Sean Chua expected the hunt for his first job after college to be tough. After all, he watched his brother struggle ...
By Jilian Mincer and Jennifer Merritt NEW YORK, April 1(Reuters) - Sean Chua expected the hunt for his first job after college to be tough. After all, he watched his brother struggle ...
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04:50 AM on 04/26/2012
more good news for all Americans...unless you're a Republican politician, ~
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10:57 PM on 04/02/2012
I don't know if this is factual but I heard 38 billion dollars in student loans is owed by people over 60.
Some are having deductions taken from their social security because a student loan will never go away even due to bankruptsy. How does a graduate today with a large loan ever hope to own a home or make a salary large enough to to free themselfs from this burden ?

I hope these jobs at least help them keep their heads above water.
09:24 PM on 04/02/2012
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/foodstamp-usage-remains-all-time-high-record-number-households-receive-277-poverty-assistance-m

Foodstamp Usage Remains At All Time High, Record Number Of Households Receive $277 In Poverty Assistance Monthly

While we do not know if foodstamp usage is seasonally adjusted, we do know that in January it was virtually unchanged at 46.5 million recipients.

And while the actual number of recipients declined by a whisper, the number of households actually receiving benefits increased to a new record of 22.2 million. Lastly, the average monthly benefit per household slide to a multi-year low of $277.27. First the quality of jobs gets diluted, next the poverty benefits.

All in line with the continued dilution of real wealth, simply so nominal indexes can hit fresh 5 year highs - today the S&P hit an intraday high not seen since December 31, 2007. Luckily, soon everyone will be rich and can retire.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MissFrijole
My bite is worse than my bark.
09:57 AM on 04/02/2012
The military is always hiring.
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UDKM2010
Life is better in Boardshorts.
09:26 AM on 04/02/2012
This is good news especially for those of us who are spending a small fortune on college for our kids and are anxiously hoping they find decent employment.
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Tquin
09:11 AM on 04/02/2012
This is written by people that live in a fantasy world. They obviously have not been out looking for a job and can not see the companies still shipping jobs overseas. Next cartoon.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SmartladyDem
Not a fan of the new format-
10:01 AM on 04/02/2012
No, I have a daughter that age and this article does seem to ring true in my experience. These kids are facing bright futures.
Vinkaye
science matters
11:40 AM on 04/02/2012
I find that very hard to believe since their 20-something counterparts that have graduated between 2009-2011... are still out there struggling with multiple part-time gigs, or temp jobs! They can absolutely forget finding a position if they have chosen teaching as their future profession. I think bio-engineers, med-engineers, and IT engineers... are probably fine, but most other degrees are not facing anything different than their peers, for the last couple of years! They are also not facing a "bright future" as you put it, since financially they are way behind their parents, in terms of salary. Read all the reports, young people can't even move out of their parents houses often, they can't afford marriage, children, first homes!
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MiddleMolly
Working to better the USA!
04:33 PM on 04/02/2012
All of the kids in my extended family (and there are many) who graduated from college in the last couple of year were reporting at Christmas that they now had jobs. That was not true last year or the year before. Now some of their parents are joining the long-term unemployed... but at least the kids are working.
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MiddleMolly
Working to better the USA!
05:43 PM on 04/02/2012
Do you think that all of these facts and figures are l i e s?
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VPerry24
Carpe Diem!
08:40 AM on 04/02/2012
Seniors over 60 still stuck paying off college loans - today's headline.
Best Buy is closing 5 stores in Minnesota.
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MiddleMolly
Working to better the USA!
05:45 PM on 04/02/2012
This article isn't about Best Buy closing stores; it is about a more promising future for those graduating college this year. What is your point?

And who is paying off the college loans? Are you saying that people over 60 are paying their kids' loans?
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Angrykitteh
You're on double secret probation....
01:39 PM on 04/03/2012
Some are. I wish I could help my kids out, but I've been unemployed for over a year now. Both of my kids have "jobs", but not anything to sing about. They're just glad they're working.
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muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
07:55 AM on 04/02/2012
On the other side we see JOBS leaving the country at a high rate: GE moving X-ray business to China. What message is sent to U.S.?
FROM CNN's Jack Cafferty:

Here is more evidence of the suicide mission this country is on: General Electric announced it's moving its 115-year-old X-ray business from Waukesha, Wisconsin to Beijing, China.

The X-ray business is part of General Electric's GE Healthcare unit, and this move is just part of a broader plan by GE to invest $2 billion in China.

This will become the first GE business to be headquartered there. A handful of the unit's top executives will be transferred to China but otherwise, the company says, none of the 150 staffers in the Milwaukee-area facility will lose jobs or be transferred. However, GE plans to hire more than 65 engineers and a support staff at a new facility in China.

We all know now that GE has just sent 60,000 JOBS to India. they have also hired 4000 H1b Visa workers from India. General electric all by itself has shown us that the jobs will GO to whoever is willing to work for $6.50 a day. MR
http://caffertyfile.blogs.cnn.com/2011/07/27/ge-moving-x-ray-business-to-china-what-message-is-sent-to-u-s/
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
08:04 AM on 04/02/2012
Business Axiom: Capital always flows to the cheapest possible labor.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Gudrun
My micro-bio is empty
10:10 AM on 04/02/2012
In time, the Chinese will demand highe wages.
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MiddleMolly
Working to better the USA!
05:53 PM on 04/02/2012
Of course that is true, but hiring for 2012 graduates is still up 9-10% over last year.

But you are right, we can't just forget these really difficult problems with big business in this country because more people are working.
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muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
06:35 PM on 04/02/2012
TY, catch me now on Chinese Glimpse. FF
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pepper1311
POGS are dirt
07:33 AM on 04/02/2012
More jobs equals more wining on HP. What do you kids want free everything...
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SmartladyDem
Not a fan of the new format-
10:02 AM on 04/02/2012
Eh?
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MiddleMolly
Working to better the USA!
05:54 PM on 04/02/2012
Talk about a comment that makes no sense.
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BigBearcatBill
This is the real Bearcat - a Binturong
06:45 AM on 04/02/2012
I set my retirement budget goals lower a couple years ago and semi-retired a little over a year ago, creating at least one or maybe two jobs since it is a growing major med center I left and know they have expanded dept since. Knowing I create at least one job and helped management to think about expansion probably (want to take some credit, they didn't seem interested until I left) is part of the best feeling of being an "old guy/fart". So I hope management of all orgs, private or public/gov work with those close to retirement to find ways to keep creating slots for young professionals/grads to get their jobs they studied to get along with their independence from their parents/financial supporters, and maybe they should think of working with near retirees to start sharing their hours by part-time work or early retirement incentives.
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VPerry24
Carpe Diem!
05:33 AM on 04/02/2012
The highway bill passed and that means 1.8 million people will lose their jobs. Just read another story about mass layoffs but this is election year and those get buried but you can find them!
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MiddleMolly
Working to better the USA!
05:58 PM on 04/02/2012
No.. It means that 1.8 million people will NOT lose their jobs. It's only a three month extension, but it's better than 1.8 million people losing their jobs. Why did you think that signing the bill means 1.8 million people will LOSE their jobs?
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VPerry24
Carpe Diem!
06:05 PM on 04/02/2012
I repeated what the article had said about the GOP Highway Bill.
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MSROADKILL612
love auto biographys. any appS to write mine?
02:53 AM on 04/02/2012
HELP WANTED

http://www.smh.com.au/national/us-workers-to-fill-shortages-in-australia-20120402-1w7pp.html

Not an ideal forum to post in, as seems mainly about trades (tho re engineers also), but no other stories about jobs atm on hp - unusually

have been urging our US brothers to consider it for ages - cant be worse than the slobs we get now - so tell your friends

pity u dont use metric tho - can see that being a problem

despite the rumors - of color is fine

sniff around google for typical jobs - the A$ is worth~.05~ more than $us now - wages are good - but watch those costs - esp. tax, cars, gas & rent - u may also wish to choose a lattitude u r comfortable with - the top 1/3 is pretty equatorial & the middle like the sahara w/ no sand

in no way is this meant to help teabaggers - pls stay away

u may also be wasting your time if u have form & dont fess up to it, even if minor - i know they can & do check
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zanzig
10:03 AM on 04/02/2012
The announcement was for jobs in construction and mining.
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MSROADKILL612
love auto biographys. any appS to write mine?
10:25 AM on 04/02/2012
Reading between the lines - u may be right, but neither word appeared in the announcement.

If you cant read, its a bad start
02:11 AM on 04/02/2012
I think nowdays you need a BA in the liberal Arts and a BS in a hard science or chemical, electrical, or mechanical engineering with top grades to really function well in a multitasking environment.
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Josh Crawford
Just the facts, man!
12:51 AM on 04/02/2012
MORE good news for all Americans...unless you're a Republican politician, of course....
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gomezrules
Why Don't We Do It In The Road?
12:43 AM on 04/02/2012
Seeing how the headline on the main Business page said "Graduation Present", concluded that Obama, in yet another shameless effort to buy votes at the taxpayers expense, had signed on to 'forgiving' all of the students debts that have accrued. In this Nanny State we have created, there is no doubt that many of them EXPECT that.
09:41 AM on 04/02/2012
You write it like it all already happened even though it's a figment of your imagination. If you're going to make stuff up to believe, you should probably go even bigger so you can get REALLY angry.