Biggest jobless jump since '86 _ Wall Street sinks

stumble digg reddit del.ico.us news trust mixx.com

JEANNINE AVERSA | June 6, 2008 04:17 PM EST | AP

Compare other versions »

Show your support.
Buzz this article up.
Michael Shane Simmons checks his e-mail, waiting to hear back about a job with a city summer arts program at the Pennsylvania CareerLink office in downtown Philadelphia, Friday, June 6, 2008. Pink slips piled up and jobs disappeared into thin air in May as the nation's unemployment rate zoomed to 5.5 percent in the biggest one-month jump in decades. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

WASHINGTON — Pink slips piled up and jobs disappeared into thin air in May as the nation's unemployment rate zoomed to 5.5 percent in the biggest one-month jump in decades. Wall Street swooned, and the White House said President Bush was considering new proposals to revive the economy.

Help-wanted signs are vanishing along with jobs, so the unemployment rate is likely to keep climbing, a government report indicated, underscoring the toll the housing and credit crises are taking on jobseekers, employers and the economy as a whole.

Adding to the pain, oil prices soared to a new record high, while the value of the dollar fell.

The Dow Jones industrials tumbled almost 400 points.

The White House snapped into crisis-management mode. The president is now considering further plans to help energize the economy, which had already been teetering on the edge of recession, said counselor Ed Gillespie. Bush acknowledged, "This is a time of turbulence in the housing market and slow growth for our overall economy."

Pounded by soaring energy prices and plagued by uncertainty, nervous employers clamped down further on hiring in May.

Friday's Labor Department report was filled with sobering numbers:

_ Employers eliminated 49,000 jobs in May, the fifth straight month of nationwide losses.

_ The number of unemployed people grew by 861,000 _ to 8.5 million.

_ Job losses for the year reached 324,000.

Longer unemployment lines mean even more angst for those seeking work.

Barbara Bowens, 52, of Washington, D.C., has been laid off from a janitorial job since March. The prospects of finding a new job "don't look so good," she said. "I can't pay bills off nothing." Collecting unemployment benefits helps, but "I've got to pinch pennies."

Cheryl Williams, who lives in the Tulsa, Okla., suburb of Broken Arrow, has been looking for work for two years after losing her job as a certified nurse's aide. The 37-year-old relies on $225 a month in welfare and odds-and-ends jobs to support her two kids.

"I have job searched and job searched and job searched," Williams said. "I would like to have a real job."

Just in the past several days General Motors Corp., United Airlines and others have joined the flurry of job-cut announcements.

The unemployment rate shot up from 5 percent in April, reflecting more workers losing their jobs as well as an influx of young people looking for work. It was the biggest over-the-month swing in the rate since February 1986. The increase left the jobless rate at its highest since October 2004.

The unemployment rate for blacks climbed to 9.7 percent, the highest since late 2005. The rate for teenagers rose to 18.7 percent, the highest in five years. The rate for Hispanics held steady at 6.9 percent.

Economists believe the 5.5 percent nationwide unemployment rate may overstate the weakness in the job market. But they still say it's heading higher. Some predict it will hit 6 percent or higher early next year.

"Employers are uncertain about where the economy is going, so they are more cautious than they would normally be in pulling the hiring trigger," said Tig Gilliam, chief executive officer of Adecco North America, a placement and recruiting firm.

Both employers and workers, he said, are now inclined to look locally. The housing bust has made it difficult for people to sell their homes and relocate for new jobs. And galloping gas prices are making some jobseekers draw a line on commuting longer distances.

Drivers are now paying an average of $3.99 for a gallon of regular gas nationwide, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service; in many parts of the country, the price is already well over $4. Oil prices had been easing but surged higher on Friday, climbing above $139 a barrel at one point.

The 5.5 percent jobless rate is actually moderate by historical standards. Yet, there were harsh cuts last month as employers reduced jobs in manufacturing, construction, retailing and professional and businesses services. Those losses swamped gains elsewhere, including in the education and health fields, government, and leisure and hospitality, according to Friday's Labor Department report.

The jump in unemployment reflected more workers losing their jobs as well as an increase in those coming into the job market _ especially younger people _ to look for work, Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics said.

A year ago, the number of unemployed stood at 6.9 million and the jobless rate was 4.5 percent.

The country's economic problems are a top concern for voters _ and thus for Bush, lawmakers on Capitol Hill and candidates vying to win the White House this fall.

Barack Obama, the likely Democratic nominee, called the employment figures "deeply troubling," while Republican rival John McCain said they were a "stark reminder of the economic challenges facing American families." Both candidates pledged to turn around the economy.

Bush said the employment snapshot was "clearly a sign that is consistent with slow economic growth.

Employers _ and the public _ have been shaken by lots of talk about whether the economy is on the brink of or has fallen into its first recession since 2001. That determination, made by a panel of academics, is usually made well after the fact.

"For the average American there is not debate that the economy is in a recession," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com. "That's because their net worth is lower, their purchasing power is lower and it is tough to find a job. If you lose a job, it is tough to get back in," he said.

Workers with jobs did see modest gains in May.

Average hourly earnings rose to $17.94, up 0.3 percent from April. Over the past 12 months, wages have grown by 3.5 percent.

Still, with lofty food and energy prices, paychecks aren't stretching as far. Although tax rebates helped to energize shoppers and give retailers better sales in May, the weakening job market could make people feel less inclined to spend, which would put a damper on overall economic growth.

___

Associated Press writers Christine Simmons in Washington and Justin Juozapavicius in Tulsa contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

Employment report: http://www.bls.gov/home.htm

 
 

Comments
192
Pending Comments
0

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 Next › Last » (5 pages total)
- elpollo See Profile I'm a Fan of elpollo

Things are looking pretty dour for the GOP and the election. Maybe the Diebold machine programs will not be able to compensate for all the economic dissatisfaction. What this country needs is another terrorist attack to get American minds back to the salient issues. So, we should have a pool on when/ where/ what kind/ and purported (false flag of course) affiliation. I am putting in for Oct. 2 / Cleveland / dirty nuke explosion / Iran.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:05 PM on 06/06/2008
- JXJASON See Profile I'm a Fan of JXJASON

elpollo, Your comments are right about the GOP losing the election. But why bring up the comment regarding another terrorist attack?

Are you trying to be funny or are you just stupid?

Post something intelligent next time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:06 AM on 06/10/2008
- woodchips See Profile I'm a Fan of woodchips

It is pretty sad when we trust our politicians so little that we could even think such things. What's even more disturbing is that we are no longer even surprised.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:55 PM on 06/09/2008
- the964kid See Profile I'm a Fan of the964kid

As long as Dick Cheney and his big energy crew (the ones that wrote our current energy policy) are doing well the Bush administration thinks everything is fine.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 PM on 06/06/2008
- JXJASON See Profile I'm a Fan of JXJASON

You are right. Another thing to understand is how the Commodity Futures Trading Commission is not doing their job. Go to the LA Times Website and search OIL SPECULATION for the links to reports on this subject. Also, on SeekingAlpha.com look for an article by Phil Davis that gives links to Michael Greenberger's report to the US Senate committee that is conducting hearings on oil speculation in commodities futures.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:13 AM on 06/10/2008
- totaldisbelief See Profile I'm a Fan of totaldisbelief

Maybe the unemployed can soon get security personnel jobs in all those secret detention camps set up in the US to house "domestic terrorists"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 06/06/2008
- CrazyDogLady See Profile I'm a Fan of CrazyDogLady

Or do those 600+ FEMA "Camps" become modern day debtors prisons...where they offer shelter "sans liberte" to the poor, tired, huddled masses?

Since KBR got the no-bid contract to refurbish them - I'm sure they're swank! As they seem to be doing an EXCELLENT job building facilities for our soldiers in Iraq...as long as you don't mind possible electrocutions from faulty wiring or contaminated water...

However, given the plastic "coffin like" like containers pictured in Georgia (new Glad Ware size?)...I wonder if they will be more like Roach Motels - where you can check in, but......

http://justanothercoverup.com/?p=356
http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/sociopolitica/esp_sociopol_FEMA02.htm
http://www.dailypaul.com/node/39096
http://uspolitics.tribe.net/thread/52358535-b155-4cf1-bf5b-1fdbb0e19400

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:34 PM on 06/06/2008
- Donnat See Profile I'm a Fan of Donnat

Quick, Bush send us all $600 - that will fix it.

NOT.

There is no aspect of American life that won't improve once this buffoon is out of the WH.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:11 PM on 06/06/2008
- biwee See Profile I'm a Fan of biwee

Well, the NeoCons that created this BUSH disaster will not be unemployed.
They will get a job at AIPAC, American Enterprise Institute, or the State Dept.
Just look where Wolfowitz is now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 06/06/2008
- elpollo See Profile I'm a Fan of elpollo

Did he get a job licking is comb?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:55 PM on 06/06/2008
- biwee See Profile I'm a Fan of biwee

No. Cockroach Condi, the Godmother of Qana, brought him back to the State Dept after his total failure at the World Bank. Just can not keep a warmonger without a day in uniform down!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:44 PM on 06/06/2008
- marko77 See Profile I'm a Fan of marko77

Unemployment is at record levels because millions of blue and white collar jobs have been outsourced to Third World countries.

And on the other end, millions of illegal workers have been hired in America for minimum wages and no benefits.

Who in America benefits? A few corporate CEOs and shareholders from all the outsourced jobs, and medium and small American businessmen who employ illegal workers.

It's time to turn this around.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 06/06/2008
- KQuarksSuperKollider See Profile I'm a Fan of KQuarksSuperKollider

The real problem in this economy is that McBush will like Tumbler give all the economic tax benefits to corporations when 80% of jobs are created by small businesses. The whole lower corporate tax rates plan McBush has is a scam that comes from the right wing think tanks based on a disingenuous premise that corporations actually pay high taxes based on high tax rates. The problem is that what corporations really pay is much lower than the nominal tax rate which is know as the tax burden were the US corporations pay the 37th lowest tax burden among 40 western countries.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 06/06/2008
- spyder03 See Profile I'm a Fan of spyder03

Just make sure you take the stimulus check and put it back into the economy that will get everything going. Make sure you don't buy a scarf(probably made in China) like rachel ray's that supports terrorism, and make sure you budget out the 600 or 1200 dollars you get so you can stretch it out over the year. If you get 600 spend 11.50 a week on your needs and that way you will be able to have enuff to last a year and to create a landslide of jobs. The labor department is a joke they should also report how many exhausted their unemployment benefits then we would have a true number in this country of how many are unemployed. Don't worry Bush has a MBA degree and that should make everyone in this country safer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 06/06/2008
- OkieMon See Profile I'm a Fan of OkieMon

yeah and who was president then? 666ronnie the biggest repug trickle downer until dumbya...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:17 PM on 06/06/2008
- KQuarksSuperKollider See Profile I'm a Fan of KQuarksSuperKollider

Only Republicans would be crazy enough to put a candidate into the general election who admits the economy is not his strong point with all the economic problems we face.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 06/06/2008
- joselopez See Profile I'm a Fan of joselopez

For those who may not be aware the unemployment rate is derived from the number of people collecting unemployment benefits.

It is important to point out that once their beneifts are exhausted (usually six months) those individuals are no longer reported in the number of unemployed, even if they have not found a job.

That being said, the 5.5 rate might be much higher~~~

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 06/06/2008
- GreedyOldPsychopaths See Profile I'm a Fan of GreedyOldPsychopaths

9.7% is the broader unemployment figure reported by the Labor Department. It includes the "discouraged".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:38 PM on 06/06/2008
- mollysgran See Profile I'm a Fan of mollysgran

I heard a discussion of this subject and the speakers agreed that the unemployment is more realisticly in the 10-11% range.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:19 PM on 06/06/2008
- KQuarksSuperKollider See Profile I'm a Fan of KQuarksSuperKollider

This is so true. The rate has been kept artificially low for years based on Bush's lies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 06/06/2008
- GreedyOldPsychopaths See Profile I'm a Fan of GreedyOldPsychopaths

Amazing, the largest increase in unemployment in 33 years, since January 1975 (not unemployment rate but actual bodies) and WS actually reacted negatively with the DJIA dropping almost 400 (369) points (3:41 PM). Go figure, usually there is a disconnect between WS and government reported economic data, but not today.

Perhaps the message is finally hitting home at WS: this economy sucks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:46 PM on 06/06/2008
- torrrep See Profile I'm a Fan of torrrep

What's so amazing? It is almost the middle of June. New high school grads and college students are all looking for summer work this is no surprise. If you actually bothered to do your homework and read the actual numbers, new unemployment claims only numbered 49,000. Now you also have to take into consideration that minimum wage has also gone up, making new workers in the work force more expensive. I know many places that are not hiring part time workers just because they cost too much. Republicans warned of this when they debated minimum wage last year. Every single time minimum wage has gone up, unemployment has followed. I guess some things are never learned.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 06/06/2008
- MajorKong See Profile I'm a Fan of MajorKong

Yeah, that big raise in the minimum wage means the CEO only gets a $4.8 million bonus this year instead of $5 million. I can see why they'd have to cut hiring because of that. I guess things are tough all over.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:27 PM on 06/06/2008
- GreedyOldPsychopaths See Profile I'm a Fan of GreedyOldPsychopaths

Perhaps if you learned to comprehend that which you clearly do not understand. Per the Labor Department:

UNemployment rose by 861,000 in May to a total of 8.5 million. It was the biggest one-month increase in unemployment since January 1975.

EMployment fell by 49,000 last month, the Labor Department reported, marking the fifth consecutive decrease.

The differential monthly employment figure is not equivalent with the differential monthly unemployment figure, as difficult as that may be for you to grasp. Oh, one last point, the numbers reported were SEASONALLY ADJUSTED. That means your summer phenomenon was already accounted for in the Labor Department's figures.

IDIOT

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:18 PM on 06/06/2008
- chinacatsunflower See Profile I'm a Fan of chinacatsunflower

new high school grads and college students would probably not be eligible for unemployment benefits so i'm not getting your point.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:54 PM on 06/06/2008
- elpollo See Profile I'm a Fan of elpollo

Israel would never attack Iran without Cheney's prompting. Since short range Iranian missiles can and will target any supertanker in the straits of Harmuz, we could be talking $300 oil by August. Putin and Hugo will be crying crocodile tears. Might as well just shut down the country. Are they that stupid or is there some serious short money to be made?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 PM on 06/06/2008
- biwee See Profile I'm a Fan of biwee

The huge civilian owned tankers that bring crude oil to the USA
will not get CLOSE to Iran if Israel or the Shrubber attacks Iran.
The insurance premiums the owners pay on these huge and expensive
ships would go to the moon. Your $300/bbl is about right. But, then, those
who like to drink the Israeli kool aid might like $8/gal gasoline.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 06/07/2008
- MajorKong See Profile I'm a Fan of MajorKong

Hard to say. I can't tell which is the tail and which is the dog at this point. Is Israel our puppet or are we theirs?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:35 AM on 06/07/2008
- Oakland See Profile I'm a Fan of Oakland

Puh-leez! MI has been sitting on an unemployment rate of 7+ percent for 7+ years and nobody gave a damn. Now, the rest of the country is at 5.5 and it's a trajedy? Welcome to the Regan, Clinton, Greenspan economy. Go buy a goat and build a hut.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:23 PM on 06/06/2008
- MajorKong See Profile I'm a Fan of MajorKong

We're right behind you here in Ohio. 10% of Ohio is on food stamps. I don't think we ever recovered from the 2001 recession.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:37 AM on 06/07/2008
- elpollo See Profile I'm a Fan of elpollo

Don't worry folks, You can still watch American Idol on your plasma TV under that bridge. Just takes a little tech savvy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 06/06/2008
- NABNYC See Profile I'm a Fan of NABNYC

The politicians have been looting the U.S. treasury under the Bush administration, stealing the money or giving it to their friends in exchange for generous kickbacks, and will leave us with debt to crush future generations and prevent future governments from funding the most basic services such as education, roads, police, fire, water and sanitation.

At the same time, the same people move through the revolving door into business where they have looted the U.S. businesses, fired employees and increased the standard work week to 50-60 hours with no overtime, eliminated R&D, and sold off trade secrets and know-how to China. Layoffs, cut-backs, plant closings, share values plummeting are the inevitable results.

Last year (2007) the CEO of Continental airlines received a $6.0 million compensation package, and in 2006 he received approximately $6.5. He already has a $17.0 million "severance" package in case he gets fired. The American Airlines CEO in 2007 received a compensation package worth $6.6 million. That's just two of the insiders who loot businesses, take obscene amounts for themselves, and are ready to walk away when nothing left to steal.

Are the airlines working together with their cut-backs at the peak summer travel time, and will they be going to Congress demanding another taxpayer bailout? You can count on it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 PM on 06/06/2008
Page: 1 2 3