Americans are working fewest hours on record
Unemployment is up again, and the average hours worked by those with jobs is at its lowest point in 45 years.
By Mark Trumbull | Staff writer/ July 2, 2009 edition
Reporter Mark Trumbull talks with CSMonitor.com's Pat Murphy about job losses in the global economy and what the US recovery might look like.
Reporter Mark Trumbull
The US economy continued to lose jobs at a rapid clip in June, and millions of workers who have jobs are working less than they’d like.
These new employment indicators underscore that the US economy remains in tough shape, even as it appears to be transitioning from recession toward recovery.
The number of hours worked by people who have jobs fell to the lowest level in 45 years of record keeping – 33 hours per week on average – the Labor Department reported Thursday.
The unemployment rate continued to climb to 9.5 percent in June. The net loss of 467,000 jobs was worse than expected, causing stock investors to send share prices down about 2 percent in morning trading.
Despite the sobering employment picture, other indicators still lead forecasters to expect economic growth to resume later this year. Moreover, the pace of job losses appears to be slowing, though it will likely take a while to restore a truly positive job climate.
“The private sector’s total paid hours … is now fewer than the total hours worked in June 1998,” says Charles McMillion of MBG Information Services, in a report analyzing the labor figures.
That’s an extraordinary downshift, he says. Until this recession, the total hours worked across the entire the economy have never been in a decline of that length. In fact, they have always increased by 10 percent or more in every 11-year period since records began in 1964.
While the average hours worked by individuals has generally been falling during those decades – and especially fast during recessions – the economy is also typically adding new jobs, so that the total hours worked overall increases.
This recession combines a steep loss in jobs while employers also cut back the number of hours their employees work. Many workers who want full-time work are instead employed part-time. In a dramatic example of cutbacks, many automotive plants in the Midwest are remaining idle for weeks on end. Meanwhile, the total number of jobs in the economy is fewer now than it was nine years ago, the first time that’s been the case since the 1930s.
To many economists, the decline in hours worked suggests that gross domestic product (GDP) will decline in the second quarter. But they generally expect modest growth to resume later in the year, as credit conditions improve and a government stimulus plan provides some support. Often, employers will increase hours for current employees before hiring more.
Several other indicators are beginning to move in a positive direction:
• Outplacement expert John Challenger says corporate announcements of plans to cut jobs fell to a 15-month low in June.
• The National Federation of Independent Business says 10 percent of small businesses are planning to hire workers in the next three months. That’s almost as many as those saying they plan to cut staff.
• Factory orders increased in May for the third time in four months, according to another economic report Thursday.
( More stories )
Comments
2. Mark | 07.04.09
Yet another irresponsibly misleading headline followed by the grim reality. Take a look at your article and you will see why the MSM is not trusted. If you had the courage to report the facts and comment on the realities they describe you might be able to remake your paper. Sadly the happy-talk nonsense continues. By the way, why are there no comments on your articles? Perhaps because no one reads your paper?
3. Bob | 07.06.09
Mark: You have me confused. Your comment suggests that the headline and the comments are not in sync. To me they are consistent. Can you expand?
4. Family time? | 07.07.09
We all have our own view of work. The Europeans have the strange view that work is not the only reason for being alive. The French have had shorter hours- maybe 30-35 per week, and long vacations. They enjoy the present life. They like 2 or 3 months of vacation, and spend their first weeks back at work planning for next years vacation.
The Germans likewise enjoy family time, long winter vacations to sunny places.
The Americans, with their poor educations, no recess, no art, music, etc. are trained only to serve corporate America. Or worse to be “cannon fodder”. Work ,work. spend, spend, hurry, hurry, Staying at home, enjoying the children, and quiet times, peace and a slower pace, maybe leave it to Beaver was a more sustainable and satisfying way to spend a life. As the saying goes, “this is not a dress rehearsal, this is your life.” Do you exist to enrich corporate America, or to enjoy the freedom to follow your own nose?
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1. Mr. Pepper | 07.03.09
This is a good story of some remarkable facts about the current recession. It clearly appears to share some of the attributes of the Great Depression, and the shift to part-time work looks like it could be permanent. This will inevitably impact on peoples’ purchasing power, and the growth pattern of the past 25 years seems to be giving way to a lower rate of groeth, or a ‘new normal’ as M. El Erian of Pimco put it.