Downtime: Workers forced to settle for fewer hours
Economic Snapshot for January 14, 2009
Downtime: Workers forced to settle for fewer hours
By Ross Eisenbrey with research assistance by Kathryn Edwards
The number of involuntary part-time workers has nearly doubled just in the past year, mostly driven by full-time workers accepting cutbacks in hours.

In December, an additional 715,000 workers were classified as “involuntary part time” — either their full-time job was reduced below 35 hours a week or they had to settle for a part-time job because they couldn’t find a full-time one. That brings the total number of involuntary part-time workers to over 8 million. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, of the two types of involuntary part-timers almost 90% of the increase during the past year was the result of employers reducing worker hours, a clear indication of the economy’s rapid deterioration. If these workers see their hours restored, it will be a sign of the economy’s recovery.
Sign Up to Stay Informed
Search EPI sites
More Snapshots
- Immigration helps boost relative wages of U.S.-born workers at all levels of education
- Worst economic crisis since the Great Depression? By a long shot.
- The Corrosive Effects of Inequality on Health
- Private sources of spending cannot sustain job growth
- Layoffs moderating, but hiring not yet picking up
- Many children left behind
- High unemployment: A fact of life for American Indians
- Calling in sick not an option for most low-paid workers
- State and local budget shortfalls will cause heavy drag on growth
- Jobs creation effort needs to focus on good jobs
- Minorities, less-educated workers see staggering rates of underemployment
- Money to spare for health care
- Highest earners get biggest tax breaks for saving for retirement
- Public health insurance offsets large losses in private coverage
- Most black children grow up in neighborhoods with significant poverty
- Lost investment during a recession can prolong pain
- Trade agreement favors pharmaceutical companies over sick
- Americans agree on how to fix Social Security
- Big banks getting bigger
- This Labor Day, wage erosion continues to hurt employed workers
- More...

