- Riskier Bonds Starting to Get Investors' Attention
- GE Says It Will 'Evaluate' Dividend for Second Half
- Final Stimulus Bill May Look Leaner In The End
- Obama To Visit Florida, Indiana To Push Stimulus
- Do Markets Really Think Stimulus Plan Will Work?
- Job Cuts Reaction: What the Experts Think
- Job Cuts Keep Coming—Is Your Firm On the List?
- Life After Wall Street Layoff: Different Job, Less Money
- Trying to Help Financially Troubled Homeowners
- Lightning Round: UPS, Corning, Wyndham and More
- Lightning Round OT: Harley-Davidson, Hartford Financial and More
- Game Plan: Obama’s Second Honeymoon?
- Speculating on GMX Resources
- Cramer: 10 Reasons This Market’s Better Than You Think
- Subway Keeps Phelps
- Your First Move For Monday February 9th
- Web Extra: Fast & Furious Trades For Monday
- The Wine Bailout
The nation's unemployment rate bolted to 7.2 percent in December, the highest level in 16 years, as nervous employers slashed 524,000 jobs, capping one of the worst years in modern history for American workers.
The Labor Department's report, released Friday, underscored the grim toll the deepening recession is having on workers and companies. And it highlights the difficulty President-elect Barack Obama faces in resuscitating the flat-lined economy.
![]() |
AP |
"The job situation is ugly and is going to get uglier," said Richard Yamarone, chief economist at Argus Research in New York. "There's no reason to expect hiring anytime in the next three to six months. We are not going to see any hiring until the government steps in and acts. Talk doesn't work."
This year has gotten off to a rough start with a flurry of big corporate layoffs, pointing to another year of hefty job reductions.
For all of 2008, the economy lost a net total of 2.6 million jobs. That was the most since 1945, when nearly 2.8 million jobs were lost.
Though the U.S. labor force has more than tripled since then, losses of this magnitude are still being painfully felt. With employers throttling back hiring, the nation's jobless rate averaged 5.8 percent last year. That was up sharply from 4.6 percent in 2007 and was the highest since 2003.
While economists were forecasting even more payroll reductions in December—around 550,000—job losses in both October and November turned out to be deeper than previously estimated.
Revised figures showed employers slashed 584,000 positions in November and 423,000 in October.
The unemployment rate, meanwhile, rose from 6.8 percent in November, to 7.2 percent last month, the highest since January 1993. Economists were expecting the jobless rate to rise to 7 percent.
Video: Pimco's Bill Gross discusses the jobs numbers.
Losses were widespread in December. Construction companies slashed 101,000, and manufacturers axed a a whopping 149,000 jobs. Professional and business services got rid of 113,000 jobs. Retailers eliminated nearly 67,000 jobs, and leisure and hospitality reduced employment by 22,000.
That more than swamped gains in education and health care, and the government. All told, 11.1 million people were unemployed in December.
Employers are chopping costs as they try to cope with dwindling appetite from customers in the U.S. as well as in other countries, which are struggling with their own economic problems.
Not only are employers cutting jobs; they also are cutting workers' hours. The average work week in December fell to 33.3 hours, the lowest level on records dating to 1964.
Slideshows:
And the number of people who work part time—a category that includes those who would like to work full time but whose hours were cut back or those who were unable to find full-time work—jumped to 8 million in December, from 7.3 million in November.
Workers with jobs saw modest wage gains. Average hourly earnings rose to $18.36 in December, up 0.3 percent from the previous month. Economists were expecting a 0.2 percent increase.
Over the year, wages have increased 3.7 percent, although high prices for energy and food earlier this year made people feel like their paychecks weren't stretching that far.
The US recession, which just entered its second year, is already the longest in a quarter-century, and is likely to stretch well into this year.
The fact that the country is battling a housing collapse, a lockup in lending and the worst financial crisis since the 1930s make the current downturn especially dangerous.
G&K Services, which provides uniforms and facility services, on Friday said it is eliminating 460 jobs as it aims to trim costs amid weak demand. And late Thursday, Intermec [IN
Loading...
()
], which makes electronic devices for tracking inventory, said it plans to cut 150 jobs, or 7 percent of its work force.
Earlier this week, drugstore operator Walgreen [WAG
Loading...
()
], managed care provider Cigna [CI
Loading...
()
], aluminum producer Alcoa [AAA
Loading...
()
], data-storage company EMC [EMC
Loading...
()
] and computer products maker Logitech International [LOGI
Loading...
()
] all announced major layoffs to cope with the recession.
All the problems have forced consumers and companies alike to retrench, feeding into a vicious cycle that Washington policymakers are finding difficult to break.
Obama says a bold approach is needed to bust through this cycle and revive economy.
"I don't believe it's too late to change course, but it will be if we don't take dramatic action as soon as possible," he said Thursday. "If nothing is done, this recession could linger...The unemployment rate could reach double digits."
Obama, who takes over Jan. 20, is promoting a massive package of tax cuts and government spending that could total $775 billion over two years. With add-ons by lawmakers, the package could swell to $850 billion, his advisers say.
Even with a new government stimulus and the Federal Reserve's decision to ratchet down a key interest rate to an all-time low, the unemployment rate is expected to keep rising.
Some economists think it could hit 9 or 10 percent at the end of this year.






