Sun, Feb 26, 2012, 9:05 AM EST - U.S. Markets closed

US job market ends year in better shape

Modest economic growth, fewer layoffs points to steady hiring gains next year

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The long-suffering job market is ending the year better off than it began.

The number of people applying for unemployment benefits each week has dropped by 10 percent since January. The unemployment rate, 8.6 percent in November, is at its lowest level in nearly three years.

Factory output is rising, business owners say they're more optimistic about hiring and consumer confidence has jumped to its highest level since April. Even the beleaguered housing market is looking slightly better.

"We are ending the year on an up note," says Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors.

Still, 25 million Americans remain out of work or unable to find full-time jobs. Most analysts forecast a stronger economy and job growth in 2012 — and rule out a second recession — but they caution that could change if Europe's debt crisis worsens or consumers pull back on spending.

On Thursday, the Labor Department said the number of people applying for unemployment benefits last week rose 15,000 to 381,000. But the four-week average, a less volatile measure, dropped to 375,000 — the lowest level since June 2008.

When applications for unemployment benefits consistently fall below 375,000, economists consider it a reasonable sign that hiring is rising enough to push the unemployment rate lower. The four-week average has remained below 400,000 for seven weeks, the longest stretch since April.

A mildly positive report on housing also came out on Thursday. The National Association of Realtors said the number of people who signed contracts to buy homes rose in November to its highest level in a year and a half.

The association sought to temper enthusiasm by noting that the number of canceled contracts is also on the rise. But financial markets seized on the good news in both reports.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose more than 113 points in afternoon trading.

"The recovery in the labor market is maintaining its momentum," says Michael Gapen, an economist at Barclays Capital.

That's noteworthy for an economy faced with a debt crisis in Europe and, as recently as last summer, scattered predictions of a second recession at home.

There was plenty of reason for gloom. A political standoff over the federal borrowing limit brought the United States to the brink of default and cost the nation its top-drawer credit rating.

Most analysts now say another recession is unlikely.

The economy likely grew at an annual rate of 3 percent or more in the final three months of this year, analysts say. That would top the 1.8 percent growth rate in the July-September quarter, and the 0.9 percent growth rate in the first half of the year.

Employers have added an average of 143,000 net jobs a month from September through November. That's almost double the pace for the previous three months. Although it's below the pace from the first quarter of 2011,

Next year should be even better for hiring. The Associated Press surveyed 36 economists this month who said they expect the economy to generate an average of about 175,000 jobs per month in 2012. That's almost double the pace for the previous three months, but not as high as job growth in the first quarter of the year.

Job listings website Indeed.com says its revenue has more than doubled in the past year as companies spend more on recruiting. CEO Paul Forster says the healthcare, energy and information-technology sectors have the greatest increase in job openings.

More small businesses plan to hire than at any time in three years, a trade group said earlier this month. And a separate private-sector survey found more companies are planning to add workers in the first quarter of next year than at any time since 2008.

Consumers are also growing more confident. The Conference Board said Tuesday that its consumer confidence index rose to 64.5 in December, the highest reading since April.

Still, the economy and job market remain vulnerable to setbacks.

Economists view Europe as the biggest threat to the global economy in 2012. Europe is expected to fall into recession as banks reduce lending and countries cut spending and raise taxes in response to a simmering government-debt crisis.

In the worst case, a government default could destabilize the eurozone financial system and trigger a global panic.

Economists are also concerned that consumer spending in the U.S. could taper off if wages — which did not keep up with inflation in 2011 — do not rise faster or if families decide to purchase less on credit.

In November, the unemployment rate fell to 8.6 percent from 9 percent to its lowest level since March 2009. About half that decline was attributed to the 315,000 people who gave up looking for work. When people stop looking for a job, the government no longer counts them as unemployed.

Economists surveyed by the AP predict the unemployment rate will fall to 8.4 percent by Election Day.

About 7.2 million people are receiving unemployment benefits. Congress agreed last week to keep the emergency benefits that half of them depend on for another two months, instead of letting them lapse at the end of this year.

___

Follow Christopher S. Rugaber at twitter.com/ChrisRugaber.

 
  • James  •  Greenville, South Carolina  •  1 month 28 days ago
    i have a job my pay has been cut 40 percent.... going backwards fast for the last 2 years. 1 job 27 years (eastman Kodak) the next paid my move south same wage lasted 31 months they where going to call me back but laid off another 100 +, next job one day the chains on the door Closed. next job job wages cut then hours cut to 32 or less per week that is after a 56 mile drive one way. Oh yes I am working but for 1980 wages..
  • Hugo  •  Orlando, Florida  •  1 month 28 days ago
    Once again the propaganda machine goes to work! "We ended the year in better shape than we began" ....really? I live in Florida, a state that is devastated by unemployment. There are so many people who have "fallen off the grid" it's not even funny. There are currently 2 million homes for sale nationwide with the average listing taking 114 days to close, exactly the same time it took to close a sale exactly 1 year ago. What a pile of crap! Can you tell we're in an election cycle?
  • A Yahoo! User  •  1 month 28 days ago
    The MSM is nothing but the propaganda ministry for the criminal government.
  • Chimes  •  1 month 28 days ago
    I DO NOT KNOW ANYONE THAT BELIEVES THIS CRAP.
    I DO NOT...
  • brazensol  •  1 month 28 days ago
    Of course things look better when you don't include the hundreds of thousands of job seekers who have simply given up looking for a job. If you didn't include the first 15 trillion of our debt, suddenly it doesn't look so bad either!
  • Old codger  •  Sanborn, Iowa  •  1 month 28 days ago
    Figures don't lie.....liars figure!
  • JC  •  Richardson, Texas  •  1 month 28 days ago
    what hat do you pull these numbers from ? a 10% drop each week ? we should be near 3% unemplyment. Yet 25 million are looking for work ? Please
  • Satya  •  1 month 28 days ago
    Yahoo news is very misleading , the headlines gives a lots of optimism while most of the USA is suffering , when will we see these guys do their job truthfully.
  • mike  •  Petaluma, California  •  1 month 28 days ago
    What a crock of #$%$ ! We are losing middle class in America and desperately need a 3RD PARTY!
  • A Yahoo! User  •  1 month 28 days ago
    LIES. LIES. And more LIES. What else do we get from the government?
  • Jeff  •  1 month 28 days ago
    Actual unemployment rate 20%

    Government propaganda unemployment rate 8.6%
  • J EDGAR  •  Charlotte, North Carolina  •  1 month 28 days ago
    Thanks for the update, Joey Goebbels. Check out the jobless claims in January when tens of thousands of temp employees are laid off. It will be brutal.
  • Davis  •  1 month 28 days ago
    Actually, real unemployment is about 24% using pre1994 NAFTA metrics!!! In fact, it is through the policy of mass unemployment that corporate profits who been drivern, until recently, to relatively high levels. Long term, the trend is to reduce the wages and benefits of American workers to the level of the "slave wage" Chinese and Indian workers, the new global benchmark. In a economy still dependent on 70% consumer driven, this is clearly a FAILED economic model.
  • Richard N Balz  •  1 month 28 days ago
    Best estimates of joblessness....22%....people who've exhausted their benefits, given up on the job search...not included in Gov Unemployment figures....but you knew that in this obamah election year....Throw the DemCommie out in 2012.
  • Rob  •  Portland, Oregon  •  1 month 28 days ago
    Yahoo...Kepp trying to convience us that Obama is doing a GREAT job. More misleading information. By the way, keep telling us that Obama is doing everything to keep our borders secure.
  • ozymandias  •  1 month 28 days ago
    Lies, Damned lies, and Associated Press.
  • ken  •  1 month 28 days ago
    There is no motivation to invest, work hard, or produce in a socialist economy. Slow growth and extended downturns are a hallmark of socialist economies.
  • Incisive Rambler  •  Norwalk, Connecticut  •  1 month 28 days ago
    It is really unbelievable to read that these statistics are honest. Afterall, unemployment benefits have run out on hundreds of thousands of people--they are no longer counted. On the other hand, it might be better to move forward and face the music if your benefits have run the course. One can't expect to collect forever.
  • Obummy Obummy  •  1 month 28 days ago
    If you want government PROPAGANDA, read the North Korean Worker's Daily!
  • jeff  •  Rochester, Minnesota  •  1 month 28 days ago
    What a bunch of@#$ @#$%! Liberal LIARS! How can you sit here and lie to everyone. It's really insulting, shame on you.
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