(Source: Commercial Appeal, The)

By Jeannine Aversa; Christopher S Rugaber
WASHINGTON - Job hunters will face long odds well into next year.
As the unemployment rate inches closer to 10 percent, most
businesses are nowhere close to hiring again.
Uncertain about prospects for recovery - the economy's and their
own - employers cut 263,000 jobs in September, the government said
Friday. Unemployment crept up to 9.8 percent.
As the economy slowly turns around, sales are slowly growing and
many companies are starting to make money again. But they're doing
it by cutting costs, squeezing more work out of fewer employees and
relying on part-timers and cheap overseas labor.
Until companies are confident the recovery is here to stay, they
will probably keep laying off workers. The economy lost 62,000 more
jobs in September than in August, and the unemployment rate notched
up from 9.7 percent to a new 26-year high.
Most economists say the recession is probably over. But the
recovery isn't robust enough to embolden businesses to hire again.
"Fear is a large factor for many companies," said Michael
Williams, dean of the graduate school of business at Touro College
in New York. "What happens after the government's stimuli end? Does
the recovery morph into something durable, or is there an abyss on
the other side?"
President Barack Obama called the jobless figures a sobering
reminder that progress to reverse the recession will come in fits
and starts.
Employers are expected to continue cutting payrolls for six to
nine more months. Economists think the jobless rate will go as high
as 10.5 percent around the middle of next year before declining
gradually.
It could take three or four more years for unemployment to fall
to normal levels. The worst recession since the Great Depression has
already claimed 7.2 million jobs, and analysts figure 750,000 more
jobs could disappear over the next six months.
The drumbeat of job losses is creating fear that Americans won't
start spending again and the recovery may fizzle. Some worry the
economy might succumb to a "double dip" recession - meaning it would
stop growing and start shrinking again.
"This recovery looks like roadkill," said Christopher Rupkey,
economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi. "The heavy layoffs have
stopped, but there are simply no new jobs available, and the harder
the jobs are to get, the harder and longer this road to recovery is
going to be."
After the recession of 1981 and 1982, the economy added 1.2
million jobs in the first six months of recovery. By contrast, after
the 2001 recession, the economy lost 1.1 million jobs before
unemployment peaked two years later. It was dubbed a jobless
recovery.
Economic historian John Steel Gordon says this could be a jobless
recovery, too, with businesses wringing more work out of the
employees they still have and relying on part-time and overseas
help.
"It's actually worse now," he said. "Companies aren't going to
hire until it becomes obvious we're back in a lasting growth cycle."
Until then, economists think, the few industries creating jobs
will probably include health care, education, legal services, data
processing and transportation.
Originally published by Jeannine Aversa and Christopher S. Rugaber Associated Press .
(c) 2009 Commercial Appeal, The. Provided by ProQuest LLC. All rights Reserved.
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