Friday, July 6, 2012

Pace of Recovery More Frustrating Than Jobs Report Will Suggest

Bad news, job seekers--the economic recovery is probably occurring even more slowly than you thought.
The Labor Department will release its latest jobs report on Friday. Economists expect the unemployment rate to remain at 8.2 percent, the same as the previous month but nearly 2 percentage points lower than the recession-era peak reached in October 2009.
That’s a frustratingly slow decline, especially if you’re out of work. But when you compare it to the rate at which three other important indicators of labor-market health are improving--job openings, hires, and quits--it’s downright swift. A look at the latter paints a dismal picture for job seekers and the employed alike and isn’t showing signs of a big turnaround any time soon.
The data come from a separate monthly report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics known as the Job Openings and Labor Turnover survey. The JOLT data, which lag the release of the employment report by nearly two months, are collected from some 16,000 businesses and measure something known as “churn,” or hires and separations in the labor market. Churn has important implications for workers and the recovery, and the current rate is much lower than it would be in a healthy economy.

Read more: http://nationaljournal.com/economy/pace-of-recovery-more-frustrating-than-jobs-report-will-suggest-20120705

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