BLS DAILY REPORT, TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1998: Sales of new homes soared to a record high in February, as the robust economy, low mortgage rates, and warm weather enticed throngs of buyers. Single-family home sales rose 4.8 percent, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 893,000 units last month, after a revised 5.2 percent gain in January, the Commerce Department said. February's annual rated was the highest on record, surpassing the previous high of 880,000 set in March 1996 (The Washington Post, page E1). __Unseasonably warm weather helped to spur U.S. new home sales to a record pace in February (The Wall Street Journal, page A2). The rise in home sales indicates that inflation may quicken, says The Washington Post (page E2). Inflation could push the Fed to raise lending rates, and higher interest rates are bad for banks, which borrow money to conduct business. A new generation enters the intense, often confusing, world of day sleeping and 3 a.m. lunch breaks, says "Work Week" column (page 1, The Wall Street Journal). Nearly 3.2 million people work full time "graveyard" shifts, BLS reported last week, up slightly from three million in 1991. And demographics are shifting: night workers are increasingly likely to be under 25 years old and white collar. "It's a changing, silent work force," says a shift work consultant with Interface: Work/Family, St. Paul, Minn. Most likely to work nights: police and security guards, says BLS. Least likely: construction workers. OPEC agreed to cut total crude-oil production by 1.25 million barrels a day, after an 8-hour meeting that yielded specific pledges about how much each country will now produce (The Wall Street Journal, page A2). __The price of crude oil fell 55 cents to $16.21 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, despite Monday's meeting where the OPEC ministers from the 11 nation group ratified the cuts. Experts predict the price will fall again today, on disappointment that OPEC isn't doing more to cut supplies (USA Today, page 1). Manufacturing executives expect modest business growth through May, while construction executives see demand for housing remaining strong, according to Dun & Bradstreet Corp.'s latest monthly surveys. The Murray Hill, N.J. based information services company's February survey of 1,000 manufacturing executives found that production and new orders are expected to increase. "Fallout from Asia's debt crisis thus far appears not to have hurt the U.S. manufacturing sector as significantly as many had been predicting, and a major reason is continued strong domestic demand," says the chief economic adviser to D&B (The Wall Street Journal, page A4). The demand for high tech employees is so strong that "candidates we have already placed in new positions are receiving counteroffers from their current employers, as well as additional offers from other companies - even after they have started work for our clients," says the chief executive officer of a company that recruits and places computer engineers, programmers, and other high tech types. In fact, people are jumping from offer to better offer so quickly that this company isn't getting paid because it collects is placement fees only after a new employee has been on the job at least 30 days. Money isn't always the prime motive to change jobs. Some jump ship to work for a company with leading-edge technology. Others, particularly in California, will change if they can lop 10 to 15 minutes off their commute, because they want to maximize their free time, and they can get away with it (The Wall Street Journal, page B6). 10 million Americans, many of them in working families, don't get enough food, says The Washington Post "Health" supplement (page 7). "It was shocking to me to see the number of people who reported hunger who were married, working, and living in families with children" says the lead author of a report by Federal researchers in the current issue of the American Journal of Public Health."
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- Pentagon Assessment of Cuban Threat, Thomas Kruse Tue 31 Mar 1998, 02:31 GMT
- Re: Pentagon Assessment of Cuban Threat, Paul Zarembka Tue 31 Mar 1998, 04:33 GMT
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Tue 31 Mar 1998, 02:30 GMT
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Tue 31 Mar 1998, 02:38 GMT
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Tue 31 Mar 1998, 22:29 GMT
- Peter Dorman, PHILLPS Tue 31 Mar 1998, 02:21 GMT
- Re: Peter Dorman, Peter Dorman Wed 01 Apr 1998, 00:01 GMT
- Re: Peter Dorman, Peter Dorman Wed 01 Apr 1998, 00:38 GMT
- [no subject], PHILLPS Tue 31 Mar 1998, 02:21 GMT