Economists  forecast that employers added just 56,000 net jobs in September. That  isn't enough even to keep pace with population growth or lower the unemployment rate. The rate is expected to remain at 9.1 percent for a third straight month, according to a survey of economists by FactSet.
The  faltering economy has led many employers to reduce hiring. The economy  grew at an annual rate of just 0.9 percent in the first six months of  the year. Since then, Europe's debt crisis and stock market declines  have heightened fears that the economy will struggle to grow enough to  avoid a recession.
In the first  four months of this year, employers added an average of 180,000 jobs a  month. But in the four months since, job gains have averaged just  40,000. In August, employers didn't add any jobs — the worst showing  since September 2010.
The  economy must create at least 125,000 net jobs a month to keep up with a  growing population. At least twice as many are needed to rapidly shrink  the unemployment rate. Unemployment has topped 8 percent for the past 31  months. It's the longest such stretch on record.
The  economy desperately needs more hiring to boost the overall incomes of  Americans, who would likely then spend more. Consumer spending accounts  for 70 percent of the economy.
It  would require robust job growth to put the many long-term unemployed  Americans back to work. Nearly 4.5 million people have been unemployed  for more than year. That's equal to about one-third of the total  unemployed — a record.
The job  total for September should receive a boost from the return of about  45,000 Verizon workers who ended a three-week strike in late August.  Their absence reduced the August job totals by 45,000, and their return  should bolster the September number by a similar amount.
Slower hiring has put pressure on President Barack Obama little more than a year before the 2012 election.
On  Thursday, Obama urged Congress to embrace his job-creation proposal,  which he called an insurance plan against a return to recession. Obama  said that without his nearly $450 billion package of tax cuts and public  works spending, hiring and growth will be...More.

 
 
 
 
 
 10/07/2011 02:39:00 AM
10/07/2011 02:39:00 AM
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