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RECESSION: November Job Losses Steepest Since 1974


recession.jpgEmployers slashed 533,000 jobs in November, the most in 34 years, catapulting the unemployment rate to 6.7 percent, dramatic proof the country is careening deeper into recession.

The new figures, released by the Labor Department Friday, showed the crucial employment market deteriorating at an alarmingly rapid clip, and handed Americans some more grim news right before the holidays.

As companies throttled back hiring, the unemployment rate bolted from 6.5 percent in October to 6.7 percent last month, a 15-year high.

Job losses were widespread, hitting factories, construction companies, financial firms, retailers, leisure and hospitality, and others industries. The few places where gains were logged included the government, education and health services.

The loss of 533,000 payroll jobs was much deeper than the 320,000 job cuts economists were forecasting. The rise in the unemployment rate, however, wasn’t as steep as the 6.8 percent rate they were expecting. Taken together, though, the employment picture was dismal.

The job reductions were the most since a whopping 602,000 positions were slashed in December 1974, when the country was in a severe recession.

Job losses in September and October also turned out to be much worse. Employers cut 403,000 jobs in September, versus 284,000 previously estimated. Another 320,000 were chopped in October, compared with an initial estimate of 240,000. The carnage – including the worst financial crisis since the 1930s – is hitting a wide range of companies.

In recent days, household names like AT&T Inc., DuPont, JPMorgan Chase & Co., as well as jet engine maker Pratt & Whitney, a subsidiary of United Technologies Corp., and mining company Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. announced layoffs.

Fighting for their survival, the chiefs of Chrysler LLC, General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. will return Friday to Capitol Hill to again ask lawmakers for as much as $34 billion in emergency aid.

(Source: WCBSTV)



5 Responses

  1. We can’t afford our grocery bills yet tolls went up! When Marie Antoinette the Queen of France was told that the country has no bread to eat, she answered, “let them eat cake.” Seems like our government works with the same train of thought.

  2. Poor President Bush. Clinton handed him a three trillion dollar surplus of trick, disappearing money. How can anyone think Bush is possibly one of the worst presidents America has ever had?

  3. There are people who had comfortable parnasahas and are hurting now but nobody knows about it and everyone assumes that they are still doing alright. I know such people and we must be supersensitive now when discussing with peolpe their financial situation.
    Unfortunately many of our mechanchim and mechanchos are not being paid on time and they are grossly underpaid to begin with.
    Veyimaleh mishalosainu bemiddah tova.

  4. I am willing to volunteer to do anything to help others with parnassah! Does anyone have an idea for me? Lets work together in helping!!!

    (I also know of too many cases of people WITH JOBS that are not getting paid and can’t pay their bills and mortgages!)

  5. Marie Antoinette didn’t say that line just fyi- it was falsely attributed to her… (and I am jobless and broke so this article didn’t miss me- I just wanted to point that out)…

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