http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-jobless-recovery2-2009jul02,0,1266091.story

>From the Los Angeles Times

Hiring might not rebound in an economic recovery
After upheaval in the auto and financial sectors, many workers may
find the jobs they lost are gone forever.
By Don Lee

July 2, 2009

Reporting from Washington — Even as the nation's economy begins
clawing its way out of the worst recession in 60 years, there are
growing signs that this recovery could come with an unsettling twist:
The wheels of commerce may begin to turn again without any substantial
boost in jobs.

Not only is the national unemployment rate, now 9.4%, likely to climb
into double digits later this year, but it is also expected to remain
there well into 2010, economists say. That would prolong the misery of
the unemployed, squeeze retailers and other businesses, and add
millions of dollars in government costs and lost productivity. It
could even threaten the recovery itself.

Though it's common for the jobless rate to keep climbing for a time
after economic output turns positive, the aftermath of the last two
downturns, in 1990-91 and 2001, introduced the idea of a "jobless
recovery." Even though the economy improved, many unemployed workers
discovered that jobs as good as the ones they'd lost were almost
impossible to find.

This time, many economists say, there are new factors that could make
the problem worse. Many more layoffs in this recession have been
permanent, not temporary.

And mass layoffs are continuing at a record pace; in May they cost
nearly 313,000 workers their jobs. Since the recession began in
December 2007, the U.S. economy has shed 6 million payroll jobs. That
tally is expected to grow today when the Labor Department releases the
June employment figures.

Also, instead of shrinking operations, companies have shut down whole
business units or made sweeping structural changes: General Motors
Corp. and Chrysler, for example, closed hundreds of dealerships.
Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. cut tens of thousands of
positions.

In addition, workers who survived job cuts are, on average, working
fewer hours per week than ever before, according to Labor Department
statistics. That means employers, even when they feel confident enough
about the recovery to expand, will begin by giving more hours to
existing employees instead of hiring new ones.

More troubling still is the outlook for consumer spending, the main
driver of the U.S. economy. If people don't spend, many businesses
simply won't have the means or the need to hire employees.

Indeed, the depth of this recession, plus widespread expectations that
unemployment will keep rising into 2010 and remain high thereafter,
may exert a powerful drag on the recovery.

Shortly after the 1990-91 recession, consumers went out and bought
houses, cars and other expensive goods on credit, noted Richard
Curtin, director of the University of Michigan consumer sentiment
survey.

That helped boost job growth in construction, manufacturing and other
industries.

But this time around, because of the severe credit crunch, people
won't be able to get financing as easily, and those who can borrow
will be reluctant to do so, Curtin's surveys indicate.

Instead of leading the way to a more vigorous economy, consumers are
saying they want to save and keep their personal debts low. Americans
socked away almost 7% of their after-tax income in May, the highest
rate in 15 years.

"What this means is that we're going to have a slow-growing consumer
sector," Curtin said. So even though the federal government's stimulus
spending is likely to pick up some of the consumption slack next year,
he said, "spending is expected to slow down in 2011 and disappear in
2012."

That's what scares Howard Roth, chief economist at California's
Department of Finance. The Golden State has been hit particularly hard
by the housing meltdown, and its jobless rate has already climbed to
11.5%.

"If you look at the situation of consumers -- home equity, it's gone
away. The stock market has wiped away retirement savings," Roth said.
"The consumers are not going to be able to spend as much as before."

Analysts say there are factors that could mitigate the jobless recovery.

Healthcare and government employers are expected to continue hiring.
Green industries are emerging and will need more people.

What's more, companies today aren't seeing the kind of sharp gains in
productivity that previously allowed them to expand output without
adding workers, so this time, if a company wants to produce more, it
may have to hire.

And with wages depressed because more people are unemployed, adding to
the workforce will be cheaper. Many employers already have cut to the
bone.

At Quality Float Works Inc., a Chicago-area manufacturer of industrial
floats and valves, employment has shrunk to 15 from 20 a year ago.
Some of the remaining employees are older workers who in ordinary
times might have retired, said Sandra Westlund-Deenihan, the company's
president.

"Their 401(k)s became 201(k)s. They stayed on with us," she said. When
they are ready to leave, she added, it will create a wave of openings,
but just when that will happen is anybody's guess.

Her son, Jason Speer, the company's vice president, says he'll wait
for several months of stable business before he even considers hiring.
"We're not there yet," he said.

For workers, "it's going to be a difficult slog back," said Sophia
Koropeckyj, a labor economist at Moody's Economy.com in West Chester,
Pa. Though the economy is expected to grow again this year, analysts
say, meaningful job growth won't happen until 2011 at the earliest.

All this spells trouble for the Obama administration, which is facing
increased pressure to show results from its massive stimulus package
and other intervention in the economy. Obama's public approval
ratings, though still high, have slipped lately, in large part because
of waning support for his handling of the economy.

Obama's economic aides say the job situation would have been much
worse without his $787-billion stimulus plan. By the end of next year,
the administration's recovery efforts will have created or saved 3.5
million jobs, according to Jared Bernstein, chief economist and
economic policy advisor to Vice President Joe Biden.

Analysts say it is a reasonable estimate, though it has been sharply
criticized by Republicans. But that still leaves a huge job deficit.
Bernstein declined to give a forecast of unemployment and the economic
recovery, saying they will be addressed in a White House report to be
released later this summer.

Until job growth revives, the administration is extending unemployment
benefits for workers and investing $4 billion into worker training
programs, Labor Secretary Hilda Solis said.

Obama also touts a surge in green jobs as a result of his policy. But
most analysts say it will take several years before a substantial
number of such jobs begin to appear.

Expectations in manufacturing aren't high either. Factory payrolls
never rebounded after the 2001 tech-bubble recession, in large part
because jobs were permanently lost to foreign rivals or productivity
gains. This time may be no different, with hundreds of thousands of
jobs cut in automobile-related industries.

Construction and finance payrolls also are likely to remain subdued,
as are retail and trade.

All of which leads Kim Megonigal, chief executive of Kimco Staffing
Services Inc. of Irvine, to ask: Which sector is going to lead the
recovery?

"I don't see any job drivers other than government," said Megonigal,
whose firm has 25 offices in California.

"A year ago, we were filling 600 jobs a week," he said. "We're down to 150."

Temporary-help firms are often the first to see evidence of a rebound
in jobs after a recession. But Megonigal doesn't see anything stirring
at the moment. He says he started his firm in 1986 but has never seen
anything like this.

"Employers are telling us to wait, they don't know. It's a lack of confidence."

[email protected]

Copyright 2009 Los Angeles Times

-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to