> BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS, DAILY REPORT, AUGUST 1, 2001: > > RELEASED TODAY: In June, 208 metropolitan areas recorded unemployment > rates below the U.S. average (4.7 percent, not seasonally adjusted), and > 112 areas registered higher rates, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports. > Of the seven metropolitan areas with rates below 2.0 percent, four were in > the Midwest, and two were in New England. Ten areas had jobless rates of > 10.0 percent or more in June, including six in California's Central Valley > and three along the Mexican border in other states. > > The worse is not yet over for the U.S. labor market, and for manufacturing > in particular, analysts said as they reviewed the most recent economic > data and looked toward the end of this year. Private forecasters > generally expect the civilian unemployment rate to rise steadily from the > June level of 4.5 percent to 5 percent or somewhat higher by the end of > this year. Many economists predict the jobless rate will hit 5.5 percent > before the overall economic slowdown ends later this year or early next > year. The July employment report, scheduled for release August 3, is > expected to show a smaller decline in nonfarm payrolls than in June, when > employers cut 114,000 jobs. The unemployment rate is expected to rise to > 4.7 percent for July (Daily Labor Report, page D-1). > > Consumer spending and personal income growth remained solid in June as > both measures improved slightly during the month, the Bureau of Economic > Analysis reports. A strong 1.5 percent surge in expenditures on durable > goods provided most of the momentum for the June consumer spending data, > but spending on services also grew at its fastest rate in 3 months, rising > 0.4 percent, BEA said. Like the gains on the expenditure side, personal > income rose at a small, but steady, rate of 0.3 percent in June. Wage and > salary disbursements in service industries rebounded from gains of just > $2.2 billion at a seasonally adjusted annual rate in May to a $12.4 > billion gain in June. The sharp increase in service wages offset the > continued declines in manufacturing and goods-producing sectors (Daily > Labor Report, page D-3). > > Despite continued layoffs, consumer spending rose 0.4 percent in June -- > about double economists' expectations (The Wall Street Journal, page A2). > > The consumer confidence index fell 2.4 percentage points in July as > consumers' views about the economic outlook for the second half of 2001 > dampened, the Conference Board reports (Daily Labor Report, page A-9). > > Consumers know the economy is bad but are spending money anyway, according > to two reports released yesterday. And that, some economists say, could > keep the U.S. economy from slumping further. Consumer confidence slipped > in July, according to a survey by the Conference Board, a business > research group. Yet in June, consumer spending rose 0.4 percent, > according to the Commerce Department, a bigger bump than had been > expected. A big reason for the continued strong spending is an > unemployment rate that is quite low by historical standards -- 4.5 percent > in June. July employment numbers will be released Friday, and economists > generally expect a slight increase in unemployment. Other factors > supporting consumers' inclination to keep buying are lower interest rates > because of Federal Reserve actions this year, energy prices that have > dropped in recent months, and tax refund checks now being mailed out (The > Washington Post, page E1; The New York Times, page C4). > > Activity in the nation's manufacturing sector declined for the 12th > consecutive month in July, according to the National Association of > Purchasing Management. Its purchasing index fell in July to 43.6 from > 44.7 percent in June. Analysts had been expecting a NAPM index of 44.5. > An index above 50 signifies growth in manufacturing, while a figure below > 50 shows contraction. Higher energy prices and manufacturers' reluctant > to make major capital investments were reflected in the index, the head of > the association's monthly survey said (Lisi de Bourbon, Associated Press, > http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A16284-2001Aug1.html; > http://www.boston.com/dailynews/213/economy/Manufacturing_activity_slips_f > :.shtml; http://www.nypost.com/apstories/V4021.htm; > http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/2001-08-01-napm.htm; > http://www.nandotimes.com/business/story/53876p-795125c.htm). > > Construction starts increased 4.8 percent during June, rebounding from a > weak result for May, in a sign that the industry is stabilizing despite > the economic slowdown (The Wall Street Journal, page A4). >
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- Re: Re: Re: please post and distribute, (continued)
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- Re: Re: Re: Re: please post and distribute, Doyle Saylor Sat 04 Aug 2001, 22:54 GMT
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- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Thu 02 Aug 2001, 14:18 GMT
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Thu 02 Aug 2001, 14:48 GMT
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- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Mon 06 Aug 2001, 20:57 GMT