Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Showing posts with label employment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label employment. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Trump Economy Scores Job Increase

Trump's first full month in office brings massive employment boom as U.S. companies added whopping 298,000 new jobs in February

  • New job figures from ADP beat economists' estimates by more than 100,000
  • Official February numbers will be out on Friday and are expected to lower the unemployment rate to 4.7 per cent
  • Trump tweeted that January and February 'were the strongest consecutive months for hiring since August and September 2015' 
  • That language came from a similar report compiled by LinkedIn 
U.S. companies added a whopping 298,000 new jobs in February, beating economists' expectations by more than 100,000.
The report from ADP, a global human resources and payroll firm, provides the first hard economic numbers from Donald Trump's first full month as president.
Trump tweeted a self-congratulatory note, calling the number 'much more than expected!' 
Scroll down for videos 
U.S. companies added a whopping 298,000 new jobs in February, providing the first hard economic numbers from Donald Trump's first full month as president.
U.S. companies added a whopping 298,000 new jobs in February, providing the first hard economic numbers from Donald Trump's first full month as president.

Donald Trump reveals ExxonMobil investment will create new jobs

Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00
Previous
Play
Skip
Mute
Current Time0:00
/
Duration Time1:06
Fullscreen
Need Text
Employment in the U.S. private sector surged by 298,000 in the month of February, with goods producers adding 106,000 new jobs, ADP and Moody's Analytics said
Employment in the U.S. private sector surged by 298,000 in the month of February, with goods producers adding 106,000 new jobs, ADP and Moody's Analytics said
He also wrote Wednesday on Twitter about another similar measure, citing numbers from a new LinkedIn workforce report that showed strong job-adding numbers from January and February.
Those months 'were the strongest consecutive months for hiring since August and September 2015,' the president tweeted, mirroring the report's language.
Construction jobs increased by 66,000 in February, and the manufacturing sector added 32,000.
Trump has pledged to dramatically improve the U.S. employment market in those sectors as he tries to lure businesses from overseas and stop jobs from fleeing across the border.
Trump wrote Wednesday on Twitter that a new LinkedIn workforce report showed strong job-adding numbers from January and February
Trump wrote Wednesday on Twitter that a new LinkedIn workforce report showed strong job-adding numbers from January and February
He has also promised $1 trillion in new infrastructure spending, another measure calculated to add jobs.
'February proved to be an incredibly strong month for employment with increases we have not seen in years,' Ahu Yildirmaz, vice president of the ADP Research Institute, said in a statement.
January's new-jobs numbers were also revised upward on Wednesday from 246,000 to 261,000.
'Confidence is playing a large role,' Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody's Analytics, told CNBC
'Businesses are anticipating a lot of good stuff – tax cuts, less regulation. They are hiring more aggressively.'
The official U.S. unemployment rate is expected to shift downward from 4.8 per cent to 4.7 per cent, in response to the official jobs numbers report, due Friday. 
Trump meets with auto executives about bringing back U.S. jobs


Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00
Previous
Play
Skip
Mute
Current Time0:00
/
Duration Time3:38
Fullscreen
Need Text
LinkedIn showed the 'hiring rate' down for February but still well above the same month last year. The unusual number is a measurement of how many LinkedIn members changed the names of their employer online
LinkedIn showed the 'hiring rate' down for February but still well above the same month last year. The unusual number is a measurement of how many LinkedIn members changed the names of their employer online


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4293622/Trump-s-month-brings-massive-employment-boom.html#ixzz4amPu2pih
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Great Recession Recovery Worse Than Great Depression. We Can Thank The Leadership (??) Of The Country!

OPINION
(LEFT) FOTOSEARCH / GETTY IMAGES (RIGHT) DAVID PAUL MORRIS / BLOOMBERG / GETTY IMAGES

Americans fared better after Great Depression than today

Six years after Great Recession, majority of Americans stagnating
June 4, 2014 12:00AM ET
The economy is improving — or so headlines tell us almost every day. But is that true?
The answer to that question depends on the time frame used for comparison, whether inflation is taken into account and how you measure improvement.
News reports tend to focus on the short term — on yesterday, on last year compared with the year before. But look back farther in time and an overwhelming case can be made that the vast majority of Americans are worse off. Indeed, coming out of the Great Depression eight decades ago, the vast majority fared vastly better than most people have coming out of the Great Recession, which officially ended on June 30 six years ago.
It may be jarring to hear that the vast majority of Americans, the 90 percent, enjoyed bigger income gains in the 1930s than in recent years, but that is what the data show.
The data also indicate tandem increases in both want and wealth, with the vast majority worse off in 2013 than in 2009, while those at the apex of the economy are enjoying a much larger — and growing — share of national income.

The data

Let’s take a critical look at some of the key economic indicators.
If we assume the projections of business economists are accurate, when the May jobs report comes out on Friday, the news will be filled with stories about a record high number of jobs, breaking the old record of 138.4 million civilian jobs set in January 2008.
But such stories will be misleading because in the last six years America’s population grew by about 14 million people. With population growth taken into account, America needs more than 145 million jobs to surpass 2008’s employment percentage.
Furthermore, the share of working-age people who have work or are looking for a job —the civilian labor force participation rate — has declined. In January 2008 it stood at 66.2 percent but was down to 62.8 percent this April. Bringing the participation rate back up would require a few million more jobs.
What about the average hourly wage for private sector workers? The 2014 Economic Report of the President shows (see table B-15) that it rose in 2013. But the increase, after inflation, was just 12 cents an hour — a blip of about six-tenths of 1 percent.
More revealing, the average hourly pay of $20.13 last year was smaller than in 1972 and 1973. Back then, the inflation-adjusted hourly average was about 6 percent higher. In other words, people in 2013 worked 52 weeks to make what they would have made in 49 weeks back in 1972 and 1973.
Wait, it gets worse.
The presidential report shows that in 1972 and 1973 the average private sector worker was paid for 36.9 hours of work per week, but in 2013 this was down to 33.7 hours because a growing share of people can find only part-time jobs.
Combine lower pay with fewer hours, and the average weekly gross pay in the private sector dropped by 14 percent in four decades. That’s the equivalent of working 52 weeks in 2013 to earn 45 weeks’ worth of wages in 1972 and 1973. 

Union benefits

Part of the reason wages and salaries are smaller on average today than more than 40 years ago is the rising cost of health care. In 1972 health care spending came to 7.2 percent of the economy; last year it was 17.7 percent, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services report.
While total compensation has risen because of health care costs, that does not mean well-being has improved. In fact, U.S. health indicators lag relative to those of other industrialized nations. It just means that our inefficient, paperwork-creating health insurance system is forcing the diversion of more compensation away from wages and into propping up health insurance companies.
There is one group of workers, however, who are doing better overall — significantly better, in fact: union members.
The federal Bureau of Labor Statistics prepares quarterly employment cost index studies to help employers calculate the pay they need to attract and retain workers.
The latest report (PDF) shows (see pages 99 and 100) that from 2001 to 2013 the all-in cost of nonunion workers rose 9 percent, but union workers were up 25 percent. All-in cost counts everything – cash pay, fringe benefits, paid time off and payroll taxes paid by the employer.
That wide disparity shows the value to workers of being able to negotiate as a group for their pay and benefits rather than individually — an idea that Congress disdains these days but supported as early as 1792 when it enacted a subsidy for the cod fishing industry. Qualifying for the subsidy required that ship owners and fishermen negotiate their share in the profits, as Rutgers business school professor Joseph R. Blasi and his colleagues show in their book “The Citizen’s Share.” 

Comparing eras

But perhaps the most eye-opening measure of how poorly the vast majority are faring these days comes from comparing the periods after the Great Recession and the Great Depression.
The 90 percent, the vast majority, saw their income decline in 2012 compared with 2009, the year the Great Recession officially ended. Average annual income was down $556, or almost 2 percent, adjusted for inflation, to $30,997.
But in 1936, three years after the Great Depression ended, the vast majority enjoyed 31 percent more income than in 1933. The average increase, in today’s dollars, was $2,146 per household.
So while absolute incomes are much higher today, even adjusted for inflation, relatively the vast majority are becoming worse off instead of enjoying rapidly rising incomes, as happened eight decades ago.
Here is one more way to think about the economic data: the national income pie and how it is sliced.
In 2012, for the first time since data became available in 1917, the 90 percent enjoyed less than half of all reported income, an analysis of IRS data by economists Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez shows.
From 1934 to 1980 the vast majority averaged more than 64 percent of all reported income. Since then, their slice of income pie has gotten steadily thinner. In 2012 they slipped to just under 50 percent.
At the same time, the top one-tenth of 1 percent enjoyed on average 4.5 percent of the national income pie from 1934 to 1980. Since then, their slice has more than doubled. In 2012 they got 11.5 percent of the pie.
Most telling: 95 percent of reported income gains between 2009 and 2012 went to the top 1 percent and a third of the gains went to the top 1 percent of the top 1 percent — a mere 16,000 households.
To sum up, there are some tiny improvements in the job and income numbers, but only if you limit the analysis to the last few years. Look back a decade or four decades or even eight decades, and the story changes from an America of growing prosperity to one of falling incomes, not enough jobs and ever fatter slices of the income pie for the elite. 
David Cay Johnston, an investigative reporter who won a Pulitzer Prize while at The New York Times, teaches business, tax and property law of the ancient world at the Syracuse University College of Law. He is the best-selling author of "Perfectly Legal", "Free Lunch" and "The Fine Print" and editor of the new anthology "Divided: The Perils of Our Growing Inequality."
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera America's editorial policy.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Nearly 2/3 Of Americans Support Keystone XL. Isn't It Time Obama Listens To Americans!

More Americans Support Keystone XL than Ever Before

April 23, 2014 by 
 12 8

 0 35

As the Obama Administration continues to delay a decision about whether the Keystone XL pipeline will be approved, support for the pipeline is higher than ever before among likely U.S. voters.
According to a Rasmussen poll, 61 percent of Americans support the building of the pipeline which would pump oil from Canada to Texas, creating jobs all the way. That’s compared to 27 percent who are opposed to the project.
Just 32 percent of respondents believe that the project will negatively affect the environment, while 41 percent believe it will have no environmental impact. Thirteen percent of respondents said that the pipeline could be good for the environment.
A healthy majority, 62 percent, told Rasmussen that the project would help to improve the U.S. economy. Just 10 percent claimed to believe the pipeline would be economically detrimental.
And members of Congress, already in the middle of a tough election season, can count on some voters listening carefully to what they have to say about the project as 57 percent of respondents said that the pipeline is at least somewhat important to how they will vote