Jobless Rate Hits 9.5% In June – Highest in 26 Years

Employers cut a larger-than-expected 467,000 jobs in June, driving the unemployment rate up to a 26-year high of 9.5 percent, suggesting that the economy's road to recovery will be bumpy.

The Labor Department report, released Thursday, showed that even as the recession flashes signs of easing, companies likely will want to keep a lid on costs and be wary of hiring until they feel certain the economy is on solid ground.

June's payroll reductions were deeper than the 363,000 that economists expected and average weekly earnings dropped to the lowest level in nearly a year.

However, the rise in the unemployment rate from 9.4 percent in May wasn't as sharp as the expected 9.6 percent. Still, many economists predict the jobless rate will hit 10 percent this year, and keep rising into next year, before falling back.

All told, 14.7 million people were unemployed in June.

If laid-off workers who have given up looking for new jobs or have settled for part-time work are included, the unemployment rate would have been 16.5 percent in June, the highest on records dating to 1994.

“We were on the road of things getting less bad in the jobs market, and that has been temporarily waylaid,” said economist Ken Mayland, president of ClearView Economics. “But this doesn't change my view that the recession will end later this year. We're probably two months away.”

On Wall Street, the employment news pulled stocks lower. The Dow Jones industrials lost about 170 points in morning trading, and broader indices also fell.

Since the recession began in December 2007, the economy has lost a net total of 6.5 million jobs.

As the downturn bites into sales and profits, companies have turned to layoffs and other cost-cutting measures to survive. Those include holding down workers' hours and freezing or cutting pay.

The average work week in June fell to 33 hours, the lowest on records dating to 1964.

Layoffs in May turned out to smaller, 322,000, versus the 345,000 first reported. But job cuts in April were a bit deeper — 519,000 versus 504,000, according to government data.

Even with higher pace of job cuts in June, the report indicates that the worst of the layoffs have passed. The deepest job cuts of the recession came in January, when 741,000 jobs vanished, the most in any month since 1949.

via 467K jobs cut in June; jobless rate at 9.5 percent – Yahoo! News.

Posted by Man In The Middle on Jul 2nd, 2009 and filed under Big Business/Wall Street, Careers, Credit & Debt, Economy, Labor/Unions, Latest Job News, Latest News, Money, News, Politics, Stimulus, Taxes, The Banks, The States. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response by filling following comment form or trackback to this entry from your site

1 Response for “Jobless Rate Hits 9.5% In June – Highest in 26 Years”

  1. Hal says:

    Oh, boy all that stimulus money that Bush and Obama injected into the system is cranking along now.

    My plan in light of it… Get out of debt ASAP and into something that retains some value like gold and silver. Just checked the tracking widget http://www.learcapital.com/exactprice and I see both are down. I don’t expect them to be that way for too long. Next step is inflation. And maybe the ending of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency.

    Of course real estate is going pretty cheap right now too.

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