Washington,
DC, Dec. 7—The nation's unemployment rate took another big leap upward in
November to 5.7%, the highest level in six years, as 331,000 more Americans lost
their jobs. It marked the second consecutive month of huge job losses as the
weak economy continued to stagger after the September 11 terrorist attacks.
Since March, when the nation's first recession in a decade began, 1.2 million
Americans have lost their jobs. Economists fear that thousands more will be
thrown out of work even if the country is able to mount a recovery in the first
half of next year. Many forecasters believe the jobless rate will peak at around
6.5% next summer. That would still be better than the 7.8% unemployment level
hit during the last recession in 1990-91.
The report dashed hopes that had been building in financial markets that the
recovery had already bottomed out and a rebound was under way.
''We had a little bit of false euphoria over the past ten days. This report
brings us back to reality,'' said Carl Tannenbaum, chief economist at ABN Amro
of Chicago.
The 5.7% jobless rate last month, the highest level since August 1995, followed
an increase that had pushed the rate to 5.4% in October, the first month that
layoffs from the terrorist attacks began to show up in the government
statistics.
The 331,000 payroll jobs lost last month came on the heels of a loss of drop of
468,000 jobs in October, the biggest one month loss in 21 years.
While economists still project that the current recession will be over by March,
making it about average in length, they are concerned that this forecast could
prove too optimistic if the rising layoffs trigger a marked cutback in consumer
spending.
Major retailers reported that the holiday sales season had gotten off to a
lackluster start in November.
The administration has continued to urge Congress to pass an economic stimulus
bill weighted toward tax relief for individuals and corporations, but Democrats
have delayed the measure, insisting that more help be included for low income
Americans and people who have lost their jobs.
For November, the government reported that the drop of 331,000 payroll jobs
reflected continued heavy losses in manufacturing, which has borne the brunt of
this recession. Factory employment fell by 163,000 last month, bringing the
total number of manufacturing jobs lost since July 2000 to 1.2 million. Large
cutbacks were made in electrical equipment and industrial machinery, two
industries that have accounted for one third of all jobs lost in manufacturing
since the slowdown began.
The services industry, where most Americans work, lost 70,000 jobs in November
and over the last 12 months has seen employment shrink by 221,000 jobs. In
November, employment at hotels fell by 7,000, following an even bigger drop in
October, and 25,000 jobs were lost in the amusement and recreation sector. The
travel industry has been particularly hard-hit by the terrorist attacks.
However, one sector which has seen a boom in employment in the last two months
is guard services, which added 15,000 jobs in November after gaining 14,000 jobs
in October.
Copyright
2001 Floor Focus Inc