> BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS, DAILY REPORT, AUGUST 6, 2001: > > Holding out the possibility that the tide of manufacturing losses is > ebbing, the July employment report shows a much smaller drop in nonfarm > payrolls, -- 42,000 -- than in June, according to the Bureau of Labor > Statistics. The jobless rate held steady at 4.5 percent. The latest jobs > report buttressed the widely held expectation that the second quarter will > turn out to be the weakest of the economic downturn. Pointing out that > employment is a lagging indicator, the Bank One's chief economist says she > had expected to see "some improvement in July, and we did in > manufacturing" where the decline of 49,000 was the smallest since last > December. According to BLS, hours worked were unchanged in July, at an > average of 34.2 hours, while weekly earnings climbed 0.3 percent. Over > the year ended in July, real weekly earnings were up 3.8 percent, about > the same rate of increase as in recent months (Daily Labor Report, page > D-1). > > The nation's unemployment rate stayed at 4.5 percent last month, > surprising analysts who had expected it to continue climbing and prompting > some to suggest the economy could begin to strengthen soon. With the > economy barely growing, the number of workers on the nation's payrolls > fell by 42,000 last month, the Labor Department reported yesterday. But > the drop was less than many analysts had expected, and the department > revised upward the earlier payroll estimates for both May and June. Taken > together, the figures indicated to some analysts that the recent wave of > layoffs may be ebbing, at least for now. That helped ease fears that a > jump in joblessness would spook consumers, causing them to pull back > sharply on spending and tip the anemic economy into recession. Instead, > the jobs figures and other recent reports have caused some analysts to > conclude that the economy is no longer getting weaker, although a real > rebound may still be many months away (John M. Berry in The Washington > Post, August 4, page A1). > > American companies continued to eliminate jobs by the thousands last > month, but the economy also showed some tentative signs of stabilizing, > the government said yesterday. Private sector payrolls fell by another > 73,000 jobs in July, roughly similar to the pace in recent months. > Manufacturers -- which often provide a glimpse of where the economy is > heading -- cut their fewest number of jobs in 10 months, while layoffs in > the much larger services sector increased, according to the seasonally > adjusted numbers in the Labor Department's jobs report. According to the > household survey, which also produces the unemployment rate, total > employment actually rose by a stunning 447,000 jobs in July. But because > the household poll uses a much smaller sample, its month-to-month changes > are often misleading, said Thomas J. Nardone, the Labor Department > economist who oversees the survey (The New York Times, August 4, page B1 > and B14). > > The Wall Street Journal's feature "Tracking the Economy" (page B4) > indicates that Productivity for the Second Quarter, to be released August > 7, is likely to rise 1.5 percent, according to the Consensus Global > Forecast, compared to the previous actual change in the first quarter -- > a decrease of 1.2 percent. Unit labor costs for the second quarter, also > due out tomorrow, are predicted to rise 3.6 percent, compared to the > previous quarter in which the change was 6.3 percent increase. Import > prices for July, to be released Thursday, are predicted to decrease 0.6 > percent, according to the Consensus Global Forecast, in comparison to an > actual decrease of 0.5 percent in June. The July Producer Price Index, > due out Friday, is predicted to decrease 0.3 percent, in comparison to the > actual decrease of 0.4 percent the previous month. The Producer Price > Index excluding food and energy, for July, due out Friday, is predicted to > rise 0.1 percent. Last month, the Producer Price Index excluding food and > energy, actually did rise 0.1 percent. > > According to the new Census figures, median household income leapt to > $41,343, compared with $30,056 in the 1990 census (not adjusted for > inflation (The Wall Street Journal, page B1). The top three states by > median household income from the 2000 and 1990 Census are New Jersey > $54,226, up from $40,927 in 1990; Connecticut $53,108, up from $41,721; > and Alaska $52,876, up from $41,408 (USA Today, page 3A). > > Business activity in the service economy contracted in July, reversing the > positive trend in June, according to the latest survey by the National > Association of Purchasing Management. NAPM's non-manufacturing business > activity index decreased 3.2 percentage points to 48.9 percent in July > from June's 52.1 percent. A reading below 50 suggests shrinking activity. > In June, the index had jumped 5.5 percentage points (Daily Labor Report, > page A-3). > > The National Association of Purchasing Management says that its monthly > nonmanufacturing index -- a gauge of service activity -- slumped in July, > pressed by declines in new orders and prices, and weakness in employment > (The New York Times, August 4, page B2). > > For most of the last decade, economists, politicians and business > executives were crowing that the flexibility of American labor laws had > helped restore the competitiveness of the U.S. economy and turned it into > a veritable job-creation machine. But as the global economy slows and > multinational corporations scramble to cut costs, Americans are > discovering that the same flexibility that made the United States a > preferred place to create jobs also makes it a cheap and easy place to cut > them. With foreign companies now accounting for about 6 percent of the > U.S..workforce and an estimated 15 percent of manufacturing employees, the > behavior of foreign multinationals is now of more than trivial concern to > Americans. It is not just foreign firms that are looking to their U.S. > payrolls for cost savings. Lucent Technologies, Inc., for example, is > well along toward its goal of eliminating 25,000 jobs worldwide. It is > just now beginning legally required consultations with its European unions > about cutting jobs there, and dismissing even a modest number of workers > is expected to be difficult. Many critics of globalization have long > warned that multinational corporations would try to take advantage of > differences in labor laws by threatening to move production to countries > with the least restrictive labor laws. In the competition to attract new > investment, they warned, countries would get trapped in a "race to the > bottom," weakening worker protections everywhere (Steven Pearlstein, The > Washington Post, page A1). > > DUE OUT TOMORROW: Productivity and Costs -- Second Quarter 2001 > (preliminary) >
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- <Possible follow-up(s)>
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