Further evidence of weak demand for new employees
Snapshot for November 19, 2003.
Further evidence of weak demand for new employees
The “help wanted” advertising
index—which tracks the volume of job openings posted by employers
in 51 major metropolitan newspapers—is a good indicator of current
employment trends. The shaded vertical areas shown in the chart
represent recessions since 1970. As expected, throughout each
recession the “help wanted” advertising index fell. The index
sharply increased immediately for all subsequent recoveries except
for two. The index continued to fluctuate on a downward trend for
11 months following the March 1991 recessionary trough, but
thereafter steadily trended upward for 35 months. The index again
fell sharply through the most current recession but has continued
to trend downward since the 2001 recessionary trough that occurred
22 months ago. This index reflects the continued hesitation of
employers to hire new workers during this prolonged weak
recovery.
This week's Snapshot was written by EPI Economist Sylvia Allegretto.
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- Costly COBRA: For the jobless, health care costs may exceed unemployment benefits
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- The Federal Reserve’s exploding balance sheet
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- Mass layoffs at highest level since at least 1995
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