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WSWS : News
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Layoffs soar throughout US economy
By Jerry White
9 October 2001
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US companies eliminated nearly 200,000 jobs in the weeks prior
to September 11, according to a report released by the Labor Department
last Friday. The number of jobs cut in late August and early Septembernearly
twice as a high as most analysts expectedindicates the US
entered a recession even before the September 11 attacks, which
have deepened the economic crisis.
The Labor Department considered anybody working during the
week beginning Monday, September 10 to be employed in September.
Nevertheless, 199,000 jobs were cut from the month before, the
highest number since February 1991, the last time the US was in
a recession.
Jobs were slashed throughout the US economy, including in the
service sector, which accounts for 80 percent of US jobs and had
until recently escaped the type of downsizing the manufacturing
sector has experienced for more than a year. The Labor Department
reported servicesincluding restaurants, supermarkets, clothing
stores, movie theatres and temporary job agenciesshed 102,000
jobs in late August and early September.
Manufacturers cut another 93,000 positions in this period.
Factory employment fell in September for the fourteenth consecutive
month and has declined by 1.1 million jobs, or 6 percent, since
July 2000.
Because of the timeframe of the Labor Departments jobless
survey, the official unemployment rate remained at 4.9 percent.
Analysts expect Octobers jobless rate to jump to at least
5 percentthe highest mark since early 1997when the
job losses since September 11 are added.
The job report also confirmed that the slowdown is now hurting
low-paid and less-educated workers harder than before. After staying
steady for most of the year, the jobless rate for workers without
a high school diploma has risen to 7.8 percent, from 6.6 percent,
since July. The jobless rate for college graduates also rose,
to 2.4 percent, from 1.6 percent in December.
According to the international job outplacement firm Challenger,
Gray and Christmas, since September 11 US corporations announced
another 200,807 job cuts. This would bring the September 2001
total to nearly a quarter of a million, a 77 percent jump from
August and a staggering 421 percent higher than September of last
year.
In the last nine months, Challenger reports, US companies have
announced 1.37 million job cuts. Transportation companies, led
by US airlines, cut 96,333 jobs in September.
Its very clear that were in a recession,
said Kurt Karl, chief economist at Swiss Re in New York. The
employment numbers imply that a 6 percent unemployment rate is
on the horizon although it may be three to four months away.
In the weeks since the terror attacks, the number of people
filing for jobless benefits has surged to 528,000 from 431,000,
its highest level in nine years.
The sharp payroll reductions, prior to September 11, underscore
the negligible effect the Federal Reserves repeated interest
rate cuts and the Bush administrations tax cuts have had
in reviving corporate investment or preventing a decline in consumer
spending. Since the attacks the Fed has cut rates by a full percentage
point, to the lowest level since the early 1960s.
Even before September 11 consumer confidence and personal spendingwhich
kept the economy out of recessionwas falling sharply. The
consumer had hung in there and hung in there, shrugging off a
lot of adversity, like the decline in the stock market,
said Stephen Slifer, an economist at Lehman Brothers. But in the
few weeks before September 11, he added, the consumer was
suddenly worried about his job, and thats a horse of a different
color.
In addition to the fears about job losses, a decline in earnings
has also undermined consumer spending. In September, average hourly
earnings rose 0.2 percent, to $14.44, while an index that tracks
the hours worked by a large number of employees fell 0.3 percent,
its fourth consecutive decline. Until recently wages had increased
at a faster pace because of the tight labor market.
Auto sales fell sharply in September despite zero-interest
financing plans that dealers started after last months attacks.
Sales have fallen 9.1 percent since September 2000, and analysts
believe the industrys slump will last into the middle of
2002. DaimlerChryslers US group suffered the highest sales
drop among domestic automakers, seeing car sales decline by 22
percent and truck sales fall 30 percent. Chrysler responded by
idling five plants in North America.
Corporations have continued to reduce investment on new buildings,
equipment and technology. Businesses, which expanded rapidly in
the 1990s, have since slashed spending because they do not want
to take on new debt in an atmosphere of declining profits, glutted
markets and deflated prices.
The Wall Street Journal recently commented, the
growth in business borrowing has ground to a halt, and consumer
credit growth has slowed sharply.... All this raises a troubling
question: Are the headwinds facing the economy so great that no
interest rate, even one approaching zero, can turn things around?
Since September 11 airlines have eliminated 106,290 jobs, defense
aerospace companies 38,900 positions and technology firms 29,451.
Companies announcing job cuts last week included: Nortel
Networks of Canada, which will eliminate 20,000 positions
in addition to the 30,000 jobs it said it would cut earlier in
the year, and California-based computer maker Sun Microsystems,
which will eliminate 4,000 jobs. Las Vegas resort MGM
Mirage said it would cut 6,000 jobs and retailer Nordstrom
announced it will eliminate 1,600 jobs.
See Also:
Corporate Canada announces staggering
job cuts
[8 October 2001]
US airlines exploit crisis to slash jobs
and benefits
[6 October 2001]
New York economy hit hard by terror attacks
[1 October 2001]
US jobless claims soar
[1 October 2001]
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