BLS DAILY REPORT, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2000 RELEASED TODAY: The revised seasonally adjusted annual rates of productivity growth in the third quarter were 2.8 percent in the business sector and 3.3 percent in the nonfarm business sector. The increases in labor productivity for the business and nonfarm business sectors are the result of increases in output combined with small declines in the hours of all persons working in the sector. In manufacturing, revised productivity increases in the third quarter were 7.3 percent in manufacturing, 11.2 percent in durable goods manufacturing, and 1.7 percent in nondurable goods manufacturing. ... Although the number of mass layoff events was down over the first 9 months of this year compared with 1999, the number of workers filing initial claims for unemployment insurance benefits was somewhat higher, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In October alone, BLS tracked 874 mass layoff events which involved 103,755 persons who filed UI claims. ... (Daily Labor Report, page D-1). Nonmanufacturing business activity grew at a slightly faster pace in November, but weakening demand for new orders has some companies anticipating a slowdown, the National Association of Purchasing Managers says, reporting on its monthly survey of more than 370 purchasing executives. Another change since October is the increase in service sector employment as firms worked to either fill vacancies or expand their operations. Nineteen percent of survey respondents said they increased employment levels in November, compared with 10 percent who said they cut jobs during the month. The industries reporting the highest rates of growth in employment during November included legal services, insurance, construction, mining, business services, and transportation. ... (Daily Labor Report, page A-10). Figures released by the Federal Reserve show the U.S. industrial sector posted an annual average increase of 5.4 percent in total output between 1996 and the third quarter of 2000. The Fed's revision in industrial production and capacity utilization figures are part of its annual update that incorporates new information from various sources. Industrial production figures, for example, are derived from data compiled by the Commerce Department's Census Bureau, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics, and others. ... (Daily Labor Report, page A-11). Financial markets rallied strongly after Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan acknowledged that U.S. economic growth has slowed "appreciably," convincing many investors that the central bank will begin to cut short-term interest rates if growth slows too much. ... (Washington Post, page A1; New York Times, page A1; Wall Street Journal, page A2). According to TeleCheck Services Inc., same-store sales were up 3.2 percent over last year's tally during the first 10 holiday shopping days, compared with the 4.9 percent increase registered last year. But two other reports suggested a sharp slowdown after the post-Thanksgiving 3-day weekend. According to the International Council of Shopping Centers, sales from Nov. 27 to Dec. 3 at specialty stores in the nation's malls were 6.9 percent lower than in the equivalent period last year. And the National Retail Federation said RCT Systems Inc. reported that mall traffic was down 2.3 percent during that same period, while traffic at department stores was down 4.6 percent. ... Meanwhile, online shopping registered an increase of 140 percent during the week that included Thanksgiving, according to a survey by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and PC Data Inc. ... Online sales for the season may double this year, the numbers suggest. ... (Washington Post, page E3). Americans are buying less jewelry and fewer homes than they did a year ago. Personal computers are gathering dust on warehouse shelves. Sales of airplane tickets and minivans have flattened in recent weeks. Just as the country has entered the most important shopping season of the year, consumers are holding back, reacting to a lower stock market and higher energy costs and interest rates. At the moment, the prospects for next year do not seem much better. The enthusiasm of American consumers for spending and borrowing, which has sustained the economy whenever it seemed to falter over the last decade, now appears to be at its lowest point in perhaps 5 years, economists say. Of course, those 5 years have been among the strongest in history, analysts say, and the economy continues to grow today at a rate that would have seemed healthy at many other times during the last 3 decades. Most economists still believe the United States is unlikely to enter a recession in the next 12 months, even if the odds have risen lately. ... (New York Times, December 3, page 1). These days, committing to a company for life is out of vogue. Job-hoppers are everywhere. But the faithful colleagues they leave behind may be loyal to a fault, a study has found. Getzler & Company, a consulting firm in New York that helps family-owned businesses in crisis, found a link between employee longevity and declining corporate performance. The study found that people at distressed companies not only had longer tenure, but also stayed in the same job category longer than those at healthier companies. Leading executives of major departments -- finance, manufacturing, distributions, human resources, operations -- had been in their positions for 8 years, on average, at distressed companies, compared with 5.2 years at healthier companies. ... (New York Times, Dec. 3, Money & Business, page 10). DUE OUT TOMORROW: Employment Experience of Youth: Results from a Longitudinal Survey
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