Dec 23, 2009 Here's a little good news to brighten the holiday season: the job market ought to improve markedly in 2010. That forecast comes from Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a job-counseling and outplacement firm that monitors companies' public announcements of hiring and firing plans. Its prediction is based heavily on two trends detected in its surveys.
First, layoff announcements have declined dramatically. The peak month for job cuts was January 2009, at 241,729, the highest since January 2002. Since then, monthly job cuts have steadily dropped to 50,349 in November, the latest available. In the first half of 2009, monthly job losses averaged 130,000; in the second half of the year (through November), the average was almost half that, at 69,000.
Second, hiring plans have picked up. Take a look at the following
table, which reflects hiring announcements in 2009 (again, through November), compared with 2008.
Hiring Announcements: 2009 vs. 2008
2009
2008
RETAILING
84,367
3,872
GOVERNMENT/NONPROFIT
29,915
7,770
ENTERTAINMENT
22,385
5,541
AUTOMOTIVE
21,813
436
FINANCIAL
12,337
3,440
Of course, these numbers just reflect announcements and, as the firm notes, many hiring and firing decisions are made with little or no public notice. It's also true that many industries continue to have less hiring than in 2008: in the energy sector, hiring announcements in 2009 total 7,525, down from 18,216 in 2008. Still, the trend lines are unmistakable. In 2008 and the first half of 2009, there was lots of firing going on—and not much hiring. Now, the firing is subsiding, and hiring is reviving. All told, hiring announcements in 2009 totaled 236,981, compared with 118,600 in 2008. At some point next year, the lines ought to cross. Payrolls will expand and, sooner or later, the unemployment rate will begin to drop.
"The end of the year is typically when we see a surge in layoff activity," said John A. Challenger, the firm's chief executive, in a statement. "The fact that job cuts continued to decline in the fourth quarter is a good sign that the job market has truly started the recovery process."
Likewise, Jen. I too live in an area of NY that is economically severely depressed over the past several years. We had a beacon of hope in Hillary as our senator as she had taken serious interest in our area. It has gone back to being NY=NYC and all reported stats are coming as NY overall with NYC's hot numbers masking everything else.
Michigan as a state as well the auto corridors will need major re-segmentation and re-skilling to recover. Our area went thru that when auto pulled out about 25 years ago; the last of auto pulled out about 3-4 years ago.
What will be the new industry that is more "investment" in the economy and therefore has a larger multiplier factor is unclear at this time. So, we shall see.
-- Edited by Sanders on Friday 25th of December 2009 10:15:36 AM
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Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010
The only ones hiring are the government, but of course that's BHO's plans all along. I am hoping there is a turn around. Not giving much faith in this administration.