December 21, 2009  NY Times

Labor Data Show Surge in Hiring of Temp Workers 


By LOUIS UCHITELLE
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/u/louis_uchitell
e/index.html?inline=nyt-per> 

The hiring of temporary workers has surged, suggesting that the nation's
employers might soon take the next step, bringing on permanent workers, if
they can just convince themselves that the upturn in the economy will be
sustained. 

As demand rose after the last two recessions, in the early 1990s and in
2001, employers moved more quickly. They added temps for only two or three
months before stepping up the hiring of permanent workers. Now temp hiring
has risen for four months, the economy is growing, and still corporate
managers have been reluctant to shift to hiring permanent workers, relying
instead on temps and other casual labor easily shed if demand slows again. 

"When a job comes open now, our members fill it with a temp, or they extend
a part-timer's hours, or they bring in a freelancer - and then they wait to
see what will happen next," said William J. Dennis Jr., director of research
for the National Federation of Independent Business.

The rising employment of temp workers is not all bad. However uncertain
their status, they do count in government statistics as wage-earning
workers, adding to the employment rolls and helping to bring down the
monthly job loss to just 11,000 in November. Indeed, the unemployment rate
fell in 36 states in November, the Bureau of Labor
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/b/bureau_
of_labor_statistics/index.html?inline=nyt-org>  Statistics reported last
week, partly because of the growing use of temps.

The bureau, which issues the monthly employment reports, does not
distinguish between permanent and casual employment, with one exception: it
has a special category for temp workers, the men and women supplied by
Manpower
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/manpower-inc/index.ht
ml?inline=nyt-org> , Kelly Services
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/kelly-services-inc/in
dex.html?inline=nyt-org> , Adecco and other agencies. 

Last month 52,000 temps were added, greater than the number of new workers
in any other category. Not even health care and government, stalwarts
through the long recession
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/r/recession_an
d_depression/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> , did better. 

"Sometimes we're asked by a company to bring back ex-employees as temps,"
said Joanie Ruge, a senior vice president of Adecco. Some are even
ex-employees who have been laid off. "That does happen," she said. 

In the past, temps who do well have often been offered regular employment,
with higher pay and benefits. Given the uncertainties about this recovery,
companies are not doing that now, and temps, as a result, are less likely to
spend as freely as regular employees or to qualify for credit, generating
less demand than permanent employment would. 

Adding to this undertow, corporate America is investing very little in
expansion at a moment when current capacity - the machinery and floor space
now available - is underused. And pressure is rising on the Obama
administration and Congress to offset the shortfalls by authorizing more
stimulus spending - enough to bring the national unemployment rate down from
the present 10 percent. 

"Depression has been forestalled only because major government borrowing and
spending is filling the gap," Albert M. Wojnilower, a Wall Street economist
and consultant at Craig Drill Capital, said in a newsletter last week.

Caution in hiring is certainly the watchword at Eggrock, which makes
prefabricated bathrooms in Littleton, Mass. During the summer, Eggrock
received its first new order since the recession began: 462 units for a
hospital project in Canada. 

The order caught the company with only 10 workers on the factory floor, down
from 45 early last year. But rather than recall those who had been laid off,
Eggrock arranged for 40 temps from Manpower: plumbers, electricians,
assemblers and the like.

"The biggest factor in prompting us to shift from temps to permanent
employees would be a solid order backlog," said Phillip Littlefield, a vice
president at the company. So far a backlog has not materialized, or even a
second order, although there is an "uptick in interest," as Mr. Littlefield
put it. "We are optimistic," he said. 

Halfway across the country, in Burlington, Iowa, the recession bypassed the
Winegard Company. That is perhaps because Winegard makes television antennas
and satellite receivers, and in hard times people watch more television,
said Denise Baker, Winegard's director of human resources. Whatever the
case, to keep up with new orders, the company has added 70 workers in the
last two years - all of them temps.

"An actual employee with benefits costs more than a temp or a contract
worker," Ms. Baker said, "and as long as I can still get highly skilled
temps, I'll go that route. It gives me more room to reverse course if the
economy weakens again and sales do finally sink."

Given the nature of the upturn, that could happen. After 18 months of
contraction, the economy expanded from July through September at a 2.8
percent annual rate, and many economists expect the expansion to be even
stronger in the fourth quarter, approaching 4 percent. The rebound is robust
mainly because of a "turnaround in inventory policies from breakneck
liquidation to slow accumulation," Mr. Wojnilower said. 

If this restocking of shelves and warehouses were to stop or slow next year,
a possibility that concerns Mr. Littlefield and Ms. Baker, then the temps,
freelancers and contract workers they and many other employers now use would
have a harder time moving from casual to regular employment. 

The temp agencies often promote themselves as employment agencies - skilled
at quickly finding qualified workers whom companies can convert to regular
employment after using them initially as temps. 

That mechanism works well in good times, but not these days, certainly not
for Walter Latham of Coram, Long Island, who lost his job 14 months ago as a
project manager at the Reserve, a money market fund based in New York. 

His wife, Marjorie, works for Kelly Services as a temp at a health insurance
company's call center, and Mr. Latham, 56, finally joined her two weeks ago
after hunting for months for higher-paying, permanent work. The temp
assignment pays him less than $25 an hour - "a long way down from the
$135,000 a year I once made," Mr. Latham said.

The Lathams have gone through the more than $200,000 in savings that he
accumulated during 20 years in the financial services industry. The call
center assignment ends on March 31, and neither Mr. Latham nor his wife have
gotten any hint that the insurance company would convert them to permanent
employment with benefits like health insurance, which neither has today. 

"My future is Latham Golf," he said, describing a Web site that he and some
partners started 15 days ago to teach subscribers how to swing golf clubs.
Until Latham Golf pays off, if it ever does, Mr. Latham says that he and his
wife, who sells jewelry on the side, will continue to work as temps.

"I've never seen the job market this horrible," he said, "when you couldn't
get a job or even an offer of a job at a decent pay level." 

 

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