I've cut the following article in half.  To get the whole thing, go to 
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/18/business/18hours.html?_r=1&oref=slogin&pagewanted=print

I was pointed to the article by Karen Cole's Casey reports.  Thank you, Karen.

Ed


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April 18, 2008
Workers Get Fewer Hours, Deepening the Downturn 
By PETER S. GOODMAN
Not long ago, overtime was a regular feature at the Ludowici Roof Tile factory 
in eastern Ohio. Not anymore. With orders scarce and crates of unsold tiles 
piling up across the yard, the company has slowed production and cut working 
hours, sowing worry and thrift among its workers.

“We don’t just hop in the car and go shopping or get something to eat,” said 
Kim Baker, whose take-home pay at the plant has recently dropped to $450 a 
week, from more than $600. “You’ve got to watch everything. If we go to town 
now, it’s for a reason.”

Throughout the country, businesses grappling with declining fortunes are 
cutting hours for those on their payrolls. Self-employed people are suffering a 
drop in demand for their services, like music lessons, catering and management 
consulting. Growing numbers of people are settling for part-time work out of a 
failure to secure a full-time position. 

The gradual erosion of the paycheck has become a stealth force driving the 
American economic downturn. Most of the attention has focused on the loss of 
jobs and the risk of layoffs. But the less-noticeable shrinking of hours and 
pay for millions of workers around the country appears to be a bigger 
contributor to the decline, which has already spread from housing and finance 
to other important areas of the economy. 

While official unemployment has risen only modestly, to 5.1 percent, the 
reduction of wages and working hours for those still employed has become a 
primary cause of distress, pushing many more Americans into a downward spiral, 
economists say.

Moreover, this slippage is a critical indicator that the nation may well be on 
the verge of a recession, if not already in one.

Last month, the hours worked by those on American payrolls dropped, compared 
with six months earlier, according to an index maintained by the Labor 
Department. The last time the index moved into negative territory was February 
2001, when the economy was on the doorstep of recession. A similar slide 
emerged in August 1990, one month into what proved an even more severe 
downturn. 

>From March 2007 to March of this year, the average workweek reported in the 
>private sector slipped slightly to 33.8 hours, from 33.9 hours, while overtime 
>for manufacturing workers fell by a larger margin. 

At the end of last month, more than 4.9 million people were working part time 
either because they could not find full-time jobs or because their companies 
had cut hours in the face of slack business, according to a Labor Department 
survey. That represented an increase of 400,000 since November. 

And on Wednesday, the government reported that average earnings slipped in 
March after accounting for the rising costs of food and fuel — the sixth 
consecutive month that pay failed to keep pace with inflation. 

As people bring home paychecks that do not go as far, they are forced to 
economize, eliminating demand for goods and services that once captured their 
dollars, spreading pain to providers like auto dealers and lawn care providers. 
They, too, must trim their outlays on pay, shrinking working hours more and 
furthering the slowdown.

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