Companies in the U.S. cut an estimated 169,000 jobs in November, according to a private report based on payroll data.
The drop, the smallest since July 2008, compares with a revised 195,000 decline the prior month, data from ADP Employer Services showed today. The figures were forecast to show a decline of 150,000 jobs, according to the median estimate of 32 economists in a Bloomberg survey.
The report signals the job market is still deteriorating and unemployment will probably climb further even as the economy is emerging from the worst recession since the 1930s. After overestimating payroll losses by 103,000 on average in the five months to September, ADP’s initial estimate for October was in line with the government’s payroll figures.
“Our economy is still a long way from adding jobs,” Guy LeBas, chief fixed-income strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott LLC in Philadelphia, said before the report. “Labor markets remain the one area where significant improvement in economic conditions has yet to manifest.”
ADP includes only private employment and doesn’t take into account hiring by government agencies.
Optimists will say this report shows "The Bleeding is Slowing', but the fact is that after shedding THIS many jobs and we are still losing 150k+ jobs per month is simply stunning.
Source: ADP
These numbers only reflect numbers of jobs shed by employers that use ADP Payroll services so it's only a fraction of the actual losses. Why are ADP's numbers taken as the "Actual Losses"?
ReplyDeleteAs I understand it, we have to CREATE 120,000 jobs, just to keep up w/worker population..i.e. new folks coming of age into the work force. That would mean we'd need to create 270,000 jobs just to break even...and that's 1 month.
ReplyDeleteno link in the chart
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