Archive for Recession

80% of US Job Seekers Wont Get Jobs Soon

The U.S. Labor Department recently reported that the unemployment rate held steady at 9.5%.   The analysts at Chart of the Day crunched some numbers and it looks like the U.S. is not out of the economic woods yet.  According to Chart of the Day, assuming that the depression, economic uncertainty, recession ended in June 2009, the current unemployment rate is exactly where it was at the end of the recession (9.5%). They offer some perspective on the current state of the labor market, their chart illustrates the amount of time it took for the unemployment rate to ultimately dip below (and stay below) its recession-end level for each recession since the late 1940s.

For example, at the end of the recession that ended in November 1982, the unemployment rate stood at 10.8%. As the chart illustrates, it took two months for the unemployment rate to drop below (and stay below) the recession-end level of 10.8%.

The Economic Policy Institute (EPI) pointed out last March that to absorb the nearly 15 million officially unemployed workers in this country, plus the roughly 2.6 million “marginally attached” workers (jobless workers who want a job but have given up actively seeking work and are not counted as officially unemployed), job openings and hiring must rebound dramatically.

The latest EPI numbers say that for every job filled, there are still 5 people who cannot find a job. In this environment of constant right-sizing, resource actions, mass-hiring, firms are stock-piling cash and not making things. The cash stock-piles are huge. The BusinessInsider has this graphic which says it all in my opinion.

Bloomberg reported in February that a  majority of companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index increased cash to a combined $1.18 trillion while simultaneously reducing spending, keeping a jobs recovery on hold. Bloomberg reports that firms such as:

  • Caterpillar Inc.
  • Eaton Corp.
  • Walgreen Co.
  • General Electric Co.

are among 256 companies that ended last quarter with billions more cash than a year earlier after cutting capital spending by 43 percent. Bloomberg economists say the dearth of investment is keeping the jobless rate at about 10 percent.

According to a Washington Post article,  non-financial companies are sitting on $1.8 trillion in cash, roughly one-quarter more than at the beginning of the recession. The Post sites a survey of more than 1,000 chief financial officers by Duke University and CFO magazine showed that nearly 60 percent of those executives don’t expect to bring their employment back to pre-recession levels until 2012 or later — even though they’re projecting a 12 percent rise in earnings and a 9 percent boost in capital spending over the next year.

It is noteworthy that, over the past two decades, it has taken much longer (on average) for the unemployment rate to drop below its recession-end level. The reasons for this increased time for the unemployment rate to turn around varies. One explanation that Chart of the Day offers is that following World War II, the US found itself in a strong/dominant economic position. It took time, but eventually many of the remaining world economies began to recover and we are now witnessing increased competition as a result of the rise of the rest.

If it globalization or corporate greed, the lack of jobs in the U.S. means 80% of job seeks are out of luck. “The 5-to-1 ratio means that there is literally only one job opening for every five unemployed workers. That is, for every four out of five unemployed workers there simply are no jobs.” explains EPI economist Heidi Shierholz.

GOP Blocks Unemployment Benefits

Jim Bunning, a Republican from Kentucky, is single-handedly blocking Senate action needed to prevent an estimated 1.2 million American workers from prematurely losing their unemployment benefits next month.

As Democratic senators asked again and again for unanimous consent for a vote on a 30-day extension Thursday night, Bunning refused to go along.

According to the Huffington Post, when Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) begged him to drop his objection, Politico reports, Bunning replied: “Tough shit.” And at one point during the debate, which dragged on till nearly midnight, Bunning complained of missing a basketball game.

“I have missed the Kentucky-South Carolina game that started at 9:00,” he said,  “and it’s the only redeeming chance we had to beat South Carolina since they’re the only team that has beat Kentucky this year. Daily Kos produced a video of Bunning’s obstruction:

The Huffington Post says the stakes are enormous: provisions of last year’s stimulus bill that allow extra weeks of unemployment benefits and COBRA health coverage are set to expire on Feb. 28. State workforce agencies have already sent out letters informing recipients that they’ll be ineligible for extra “tiers” of benefits starting next month. The National Employment Law Project estimates that 1.2 million people will prematurely lose benefits in March.

Judy Conti, a lobbyist for the NELP, said that even when Bunning is eventually thwarted and the extension is passed, state governments will still have to deal with the extra administrative costs of shutting down and restarting the extended benefits programs. “Once the program is retroactively reauthorized, the federal government is going to send the same amount of money, but his own state government is going to have to spend even more money,” Conti said. “What happened last night was an absolute disgrace. There is a time and a place a purpose for debate on deficit reduction, but you don’t make your stand on the back of the unemployed. It is ill-informed, counter productive and just cruel.”

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) took the floor to stick up for Bunning and stated, “I admire the courage of the junior senator from Kentucky.” And with that, the Senate adjourned for the weekend.

Recession Over??

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told us in September 2009 that the recession was “very likely over.” Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, told CBS News on 01-30-10  “The Great Recession is over.” UPS CEO Scott Davis told the Atlanta Constitution Journal on 02-03-10 that the recession is over. So to celebrate UPS is going to cut 1,800 positions.

Andrew Bartels, a Forrester vice president and principal analyst, declared the tech recession over on 01-12-10. Despite these prognostications by pundits and politicians, global tech layoffs have soared to over 613,00 since the bottom fell out of the world economy in October 2008.  Layoffs in January 2010 reached nearly 37,000, a monthly magnitude total not seen since May 2009. The telecom firms lead the layoff  count in January 2010 with Verizon, Sprint and ATT accounting for nearly 65% of this month’s announced layoffs.

Tech Layoffs

The overall trend for the last 8 months has been upwards, hardly an indicator that the recession is over.

BPL Clings to Life

bpl Marketwire recently reported that OneFi Technology, Inc. (PINKSHEETS: ONFI) announced the installation of WiMax/BPL Technology under the ARRA. The installation will occur in the 600 square mile Hogback Region of the Navajo Nation and will begin in January 2010.

navajo_nation_sealTom White, CFO of OneFi who is managing the project, said in a press release, “We are delivering the network to meet the broadband internet needs of the Navajo community and the installation will be a model for the other Native American communities.” OneFi officials said that the company would use the model developed with this project to expand its commitment to other Native American communities and rural areas. The contract is valued at $20 million when installed.

arraThe application made under the Broadband Technology Opportunity Program (BTOP) states that a fully redundant self healing hybrid WiMax / BPL broadband network will be developed.  The network architecture uses microwave delivered from the backbone to the local community. At the community level towers are installed so that WiMax can be broadcast throughout the total area. Base stations are used to receive and insert signal in power lines which deliver broadband to the user.

wimaxThe firm’s press release states that  OneFi is a WiMax company developing broadband networks that are capable of 4G (4th Generation) compatibility. OneFi Technology’s focus is on rural communities and developing countries. WiMax is a wireless technology for the delivery of broadband internet.

In an article om TMCNET it appears that the firm requires payment up front to start the job, “Once the company receives the funds, it said it will deploy its qualified engineers to the client’s area to lay out the project and complete engineering working drawings. They expect this step to be completed in 45-60 days.The next step is the installation, and OneFi estimates this to be completed within 60 – 90 days, depending on the complexity of the project.”

Apparently this type of arrangement did not work out very well for the City of Villa Park, CA.  In July 2008 OneFi installed a  WiMax-WiFi communications system in the city of Villa Park, Calif. The OneFi Technology networks broadband signal was to allow the citizens of Villa Park to access the internet at speeds up to 104 mbps. However, in March 2009 City staff recommended that the City Council terminate license agreement (with OnFi) based on lack of performance.
rb-
BPL still clings to life. Maybe they can make it work in the middle of the desert where the giant antenna effect doesn’t matter to much. The installing vendor seems to have a checkered financial and performance past.  We always take a look at the size of the firm compared to the size of the job. A job that is a reach for a firm may work out alright, but maybe not because of financing or manpower issues. Good luck to the Navajo and us as taxpayers since we are footing the bill for this project.

Tech Still Laying Off

recessionIt has been just over a year since Wall $treet and the Bankers lead the global economy to the edge of collapse. Thanks to Obama-money our money Wall $treet and the Bankers are making million dollar bonus’s again, so all must be right in the economy right?

According to my information, nearly 550,000 tech related jobs have been eliminated since October 2008. January 2009 saw almost 164,000 jobs eliminated by the biggest names in tech. Ericsson. Google, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, NEC and Sprint-Nextel all eliminated 5,000 or more jobs in January 2009. While this is old news, unless you are still trying to live through one of these “right-sizing” it is also important because we are coming back around to the lay-off season.

glayoffs

This year’s lay-off season is trending upward after several months of decline. From a record high in January tech layoffs declined to a modest 4,336 layoffs in June 2009. Since reaching that bottom the tech layoff rate has increased to levels not seen since May 2009. August 2009 had almost 5,000 layoffs. The number of layoffs in September doubled to 10,246. The trend has been increasing since with 12,704 layoffs in October and in the first half of November, there have been already been 12,749 layoffs. Some opf the same firms that had “resource reduction actions” in January hade laid off more people in November, including Ericsson (700), Microsoft (800) and Sprint-Nextel (2,500).

lastq

It appears to me that despite Wall $treet bonus’s. the rest of us are still in for at leat 12 more months of questionable job prospects

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