Less than one job opening for every five job seekers
By Heidi Shierholz,
June 9, 2009
June 9, 2009
Less than one job opening for every five job seekers
by Heidi Shierholz
At the start of the recession in December 2007, there were 4.4 million job openings, but that number has declined dramatically. This morning’s data release by the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that in April job openings declined 102,000 to 2.5 million, a drop of over 42% since the start of the recession.
The decline in job openings is occurring as more and more workers are losing their jobs, meaning that the prospects for finding a job once unemployed are worsening. There were 13.7 million unemployed workers in April, which means there were 5.4 unemployed workers for every available job. At the start of the recession, an unemployed worker had a much better chance of finding a job, with only 1.7 job seekers per job opening, but the line of applicants waiting for each job is now three times longer.
Although employment and unemployment numbers for May became available last Friday, these Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) data are released with a one-month lag. Given last Friday’s announcement that unemployment increased in May by 787,000, the number of job seekers per job opening will be 5.7-to-1, even if job openings are not shown to have declined again in May. While recent labor market reports have indicated that the pace of job loss is slowing, new jobs are not yet being created, and unemployed workers are facing an increasingly uphill battle in the search for work.
Sign Up to Stay Informed
Search EPI sites
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
- Unemployment drops to 9.7% despite more job losses
- Jobs and Wages Tax Cut Should be Part of a New Jobs Package
- A long and persistent middle-class squeeze
- A first look at the budget freeze
- Spending freeze could spell disaster
- Jobs Crisis Fact Sheet
- Why more equal societies almost always do better [event]
- The Corrosive Effects of Inequality on Health
- Downcast Unemployment Forecast—Targeted Job Creation Policies Necessary to Offset Grim Projections
- Private sources of spending cannot sustain job growth
- See more publications about: Wages and Living Standards Jobs

