February 07, 2011
Williams Ekanem with agency reports.
While most developing countries are
still grappling with an increasing unemployment rate, the United States has
succeeded in pushing down its unemployment rate to a single unit with a
relatively short period.
Reports monitored in the United
States last week showed that the Obama Administration has fought the ugly trend
from over 13 per cent when it assumed
office about two years ago to nine percent as at the end of January 2011.
According to agency reports, the
unemployment rate dropped sharply last month to 9 percent, based on a
government survey that found that more than a half-million people found work.
A separate survey of company
payrolls showed a scant increase of 36,000 net jobs as snowstorms likely
hampered hiring. That survey doesn't count the self-employed.
Harsh snowstorms last month cut
into construction employment, which fell by 32,000, the most since May.
Transportation and warehousing was also likely affected and fell by 38,000 —
the most in a year.
"The thumbprints of the
weather were all over this report," said Neil Dutta, an economist at Bank
of America Merrill Lynch. Hiring was suppressed last month and will likely
rebound in February, he said.
In one bright spot, manufacturing
added 49,000 jobs, the most since August 1998. And retailers added 28,000 jobs,
the largest number in a year.
The unemployment rate has fallen by
eight-tenths of a percentage point in the past two months. That's the steepest
two-month drop in nearly 53 years.
But part of that drop has occurred
as many of those out of work gave up on their job searches. When unemployed
people stop looking for jobs, the government no longer counts them as
unemployed.
The number of people unemployed
fell by more than 600,000 in January to 13.9 million. That's still about double
the total that were out of work before the recession began in December 2007.
The January jobs report also
includes the government's annual revisions to the employment data, which showed
that fewer jobs were created in 2010 than previously thought. All told, about
950,000 net new jobs were added last year, down from a previous estimate of 1.1
million. The economy lost about 8 million jobs in 2008 and 2009.
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