Unemployment. Sigh.

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http://money.cnn.com/2009...r/?postversion=2009010912
[h1]Worst year for jobs since '45[/h1][h2]Annual loss biggest since end of World War II. Unemployment rate rises to 7.2%.[/h2]
By David Goldman, CNNMoney.com staff writer

Last Updated: January 9, 2009: 12:11 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The hemorrhaging of American jobs accelerated at a record pace at the end of 2008, bringing the year's total job losses to2.6 million or the highest level in more than six decades.

A sobering U.S. Labor Department jobs report Friday showed the economy lost 524,000 jobs in December and 1.9 million in the year's final four months,after the credit crisis began in September.

The unemployment rate rose to 7.2% last month from 6.7% in November - its highest rate since January 1993.

The steep annual drop in jobs marked the highest yearly job-loss total since 1945, the year in which World War II ended.

"We're seeing a complete unraveling of the labor market and are on track for getting beyond 10% unemployment," said Lawrence Mishel, presidentof the Economic Policy Institute.

The total number of unemployed Americans rose by 632,000 to 11.1 million.

November, in which 584,000 jobs were lost, and December marked the first time in the 70-year history of the report in which the economy lost more than500,000 jobs in consecutive months.

"We have a bigger economy now, but even on a proportional basis, the last months have been the worst since [1945]," said Kurt Karl, head ofeconomic research at Swiss Re. "It's just an enormous acceleration of job losses."

By comparison, the 2.6 million jobs lost in 2008 nationwide were equal to the number of jobs found in states such as Wisconsin, Missouri or Maryland.

Under-employment at a record high

A growing number of workers seeking full-time jobs were able to find only part-time work. Those working part-time jobs - because they couldn't findfull-time work, or their hours had been cut - jumped by 715,000 people to 8 million, the highest since such records were first kept in 1955.

The so-called under-employment rate, which counts those part-time workers as well as those without jobs who have become discouraged and stopped looking forwork, rose to a record 13.5% from 12.6%. Calculations for that measure began in January 1994.

"The existing unemployment figures are greatly understated," said billionaire steel tycoon Wilbur Ross in a recent interview with CNNMoney.com."They count as employed someone who used to have a high-paid manufacturing job, and now is working at a Wal-Mart or a Wendy's."

In another discouraging sign, the average hourly work week fell last month to 33.3 hours - the lowest level in history - from 33.5 hours. Even with a modest5-cent gain in the average hourly salary, the average weekly paycheck fell by $2 to $611.39.

Job losses widespread

Job losses were spread across a wide variety of industries. Manufacturing lost 149,000 jobs, the leisure and hospitality industries cut 22,000 jobs, and themining industry shed 1,000 positions.

Even in the midst of the holiday shopping season, retailers still slashed payrolls by 66,600 workers last month.

Professional and business services jobs, a category seen by some economists as a proxy for overall economic activity, dropped by 113,000. And financialservices jobs fell by 14,000.

Only two of ten industry categories were hiring last month. Government hiring, which has stayed relatively strong throughout the downturn, added another7,000 jobs in December. Education and health services also grew payrolls by 45,000 employees.

Construction employment shrank further by 101,000 jobs, and the rate of construction unemployment soared to 15.3% - by far the highest of any group.

"Today's jobs report ... is conclusive evidence that it is time to put people back to work building America," said Terry O'Sullivan,general president of the Laborers' International Union of North America. "Now it's time for Congress to move to create jobs with the same urgencyas they did on the $700 billion Wall Street bailout."

Call for stimulus

President-elect Barack Obama has begun his push for a massive stimulus plan, aimed at creating or saving 3 million jobs over the next two years. Lawmakershave called for rapid action to address the extraordinary stresses facing the labor market, including spending hundreds of billions of dollars on newinfrastructure projects.

"This morning, we received a stark reminder about how urgent action is needed," said Obama at a Friday press conference. "Clearly thesituation is dire, it is deteriorating and demands urgent and immediate action. For the sake of our economy and our people, this is the moment to act, and actwithout delay."

Many economists have said job losses will continue to accelerate without government intervention.

"The country is losing half a million jobs in a month, and if the government doesn't act quickly, there's no reason that wouldn'tintensify," said Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody's Economy.com before a Democratic Steering and Policy Committee forum Wednesday.

Infrastructure experts agree, saying unemployed construction workers are eager to get back to work.

"Putting money into highways won't by itself end the recession, but it will put a lot of skilled workers back on job," said Ken Simonson,chief economist for The Associated General Contractors of America.

December's job losses were expected to be deep, as employers looked to slash payrolls to free up balance sheets for the new year. But large-scalecutbacks may continue throughout the first half of 2009, economists say, as the nation's economy continues on its slow path to recovery.

"I think this [level of job loss] is going to continue at least through March," said Tig Gilliam, chief executive of Adecco Group North America, aunit of the world's largest employment firm. "The many clients I've spoken with are not expecting an economic bounce-back soon. They're makingthe painful and difficult decisions to adjust their capacity for the reduced demand for their goods and services."

Gilliam and Karl both expect about another 1 million jobs to be lost in January and February before the declines begin to shrink to about a 200,000 level inJune. Both said stimulus will help, but they doubt infrastructure jobs will have as quick of a boost as lawmakers hope.

"Infrastructure projects won't have an effect until late in the year," said Karl. "Tax cuts may have a more immediate impact, but as wesaw with the last stimulus package, they may have no economic impact at all."

In another sign that more losses will come soon, temporary employment, including workers employed by temp agencies, fell by another 80,600 jobs last month.Employers often cut temporary workers before they begin cutting permanent staff.
The economy has lost more than 2.5 million jobs in the current recession,which began in December 2007, far surpassing the previous two recessions, and just below the 2.7 million jobs lost in the 1981-1982 recession, which had thedeepest unemployment in the 70-year history of the report.



With that being said, I just got laid off today. Sucks because a bunch of my friends have been laid off in the past few months as well. So, DMV, any helpis appreciated if anybody here recommend any full time jobs. Didn't think the economy was truly this bad.
 
Unless you have something specific that makes you stand out against other people, I think its going to be a rough couple years for people 25 and under. FriendsI went to High School with are going to be graduating thinking they are just going to come back to DC and just walk into a job, when in reality that isn'tthe case, not in this town. I have never met so many Ivy League kids who cant land a job or people who are just all around smart and have experience and cantget a job. Its tough, I would recommend just going to school and getting a Masters, Law School or something, because it wont be for another couple years thatthis get turned around.
 
VARISOXFAN wrote:

Unless you have something specific that makes you stand out against other people, I think its going to be a rough couple years for people 25 and under. Friends I went to High School with are going to be graduating thinking they are just going to come back to DC and just walk into a job, when in reality that isn't the case, not in this town. I have never met so many Ivy League kids who cant land a job or people who are just all around smart and have experience and cant get a job. Its tough, I would recommend just going to school and getting a Masters, Law School or something, because it wont be for another couple years that this get turned around.
QFT, exactly what I plan to do in a couple of years when i get my undegrad.
 
In these times, historically, people go to school (or back to school).

Look for record enrollments in graduate and professional programs across the country the next couple years.

I never witnessed friends getting legitly laid off or "bought out" of their careers... Until recently...
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