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Investing and Economics Blog

Over 500,000 Jobs Disappeared in November

Jobless Rate Rises to 6.7% in November

With the economy deteriorating rapidly, the nation’s employers shed 533,000 jobs in November, the 11th consecutive monthly decline, the government reported Friday morning, and the unemployment rate rose to 6.7 percent.
…
The decline, the largest one-month loss since December 1974, was fresh evidence that the economic contraction accelerated in November, promising to make the current recession, already 12 months old, the longest since the Great Depression. The previous record was 16 months, in the severe recessions of the mid-1970s and early 1980s.
…
The manufacturing sector has been particularly hard hit, losing more than half a million jobs this year. That is nearly half the 1.2 million jobs lost since employment peaked in December and, in January, began its uninterrupted decline. The cutbacks seem likely to accelerate as the three Detroit automakers close more factories and shrink payrolls even more
…
With all this in mind, and particularly the shrinking employment rolls, economists are estimating that the gross domestic product is contracting at an annual rate of 4 percent or more in the fourth quarter, after a decline of 0.3 percent in the third quarter.

The news was even worse than the anticipated 350,000 losses. And Previous months figures were adjusted from 240,000 losses in October to 320,00 and from 284,000 in September to 403,000. And these numbers are on an already extremely poor job picture the previous 7 years. One of the great strengths of the US economy over the last 50 years has been job creation. We know we are in for serious problems, the question is how serious and how long. One of the most important gages of that will be how many jobs are lost.

When job losses stop and job gains start (in the aggregate, for the entire economy) it will be a very positive sign. Normally jobs are a lagging indicator, meaning job data lags the actual economy. Job losses will not increases until after the economy starts to grow. Of course, economic data doesn’t always fit the conventional wisdom.

This is one more piece of evidence that the economy is not looking good. And 2009 is likely to be a bad year for the economy overall.

Related: Bad News on Jobs (Sep 2008) – What Do Unemployment Stats Mean? – The Economy is in Serious Trouble – Financial Market Meltdown

December 5th, 2008 John Hunter | 3 Comments | Tags: Economics, Financial Literacy

Comments

3 Comments so far

  1. USA Unemployment Rate Rises to 8.1%, Highest Level Since 1983 at Curious Cat Economy Blog on March 6, 2009 1:46 pm

    The employment news in the USA continues to be very bad. We knew the news on job was going to be bad in 2009; still the actual news confirming those beliefs is not welcome…

  2. Another 663,000 Jobs Lost in March in the USA at Curious Cat Economics Blog on April 3, 2009 11:45 am

    663,000 jobs were lost in the USA in March and the unemployment rate rose from 8.1 to 8.5 percent…

  3. USA Economy Adds 151,000 Jobs in October and Revisions Add 110,000 More at Curious Cat Investing and Economics Blog on November 5, 2010 12:11 pm

    […] November of 2008 the economy lost over 500,000 Jobs and in October 2009 the unemployment Rate Reached […]

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