Employed see tough times, too
By Dennis Cauchon, USA TODAY
People who still have jobs are faring worse than at any time since the Great
Depression, a USA TODAY analysis of employment data found. Furloughs, pay
cuts and reduced hours are taking a toll on workers who so far have escaped
job cuts.
The employed worked fewer hours in May — an average of just 33.1 hours a
week — than at any time since the Bureau of Labor Statistics began counting
in 1964. Part-time work is at a record high. Overtime is at a record low.

The magnitude of job losses — 6 million jobs gone, a 9.4% unemployment rate
— has overshadowed the groundbreaking nature of the nation's employment
troubles, especially the financial decline of those still working.

"You can rip a whole chapter out of your Economics 101 textbook because the
job market isn't behaving the way we were taught," says David Rosenberg,
chief economist at money manager Gluskin Sheff and Associates. [What is he
saying?]

Even working people have less to spend.

Businesses cut total wages at a 6.2% annual rate in the first quarter.
Federal, state and local governments increased spending on wages by 6.1%,
offsetting some of the decline. [galloping deflation is coming?]

The use of pay cuts — the last choice at most companies after hiring
freezes, salary freezes and layoffs — shows how the recession is unlike any
since the Depression, says Laura Sejen of compensation consultant Watson
Wyatt.

"The recession has been broad, deep and long. No one has been immune," she
says.

Baby boomers— 79 million people born from 1946 to 1964 — have been hit
particularly hard.

Unemployment rates for workers 45 and older have soared to their highest
level since at least 1948, when the government started tracking it.

Job losses for baby boomers come at a difficult time: during the traditional
peak earning years, as retirement nears.
"It's hard for an older worker to compete in the job market with younger
guys and women. The jobs may not pay what they were making," says Austin
Sargent, an economist with Utah's Department of Workforce Services.

The average time a person has been out of work is at a post-Depression
record of 22.5 weeks.

Congress' approval of higher and longer unemployment benefits may contribute
to the extra time spent between jobs, says James Sherk, a labor economist at
the conservative Heritage Foundation.

"The humanitarian benefit of unemployment insurance also causes people to
look with less intensity for a new job," he says. [He would say that!  As
usual, such troglodytes ignore the job shortage (and implicitly assume that
full employment prevails). If there aren't enough jobs, if I take one, that
denies a job to someone else. If there's a job shortage, there's little
point in looking for a job intensively.]

The few groups faring better than in past recessions are government workers
and young women.

A record 9 million people want to work full time but can find only part-time
work.

Find this article at:
http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/employment/2009-06-11-workweek_N.htm

Copyright 2008 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.


-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own way
and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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