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Jobs Report: Economy Adds 54,000 Jobs In May, Unemployment Rate Rises

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First Posted: 06/ 3/11 01:12 PM ET Updated: 06/ 3/11 01:44 PM ET

For months, economists, government officials and headlines proclaimed that the labor market recovery was "gaining traction." Today's monthly unemployment report dealt a severe blow to that scenario, raising the likelihood of many more months of lean times.

Only 54,000 jobs were added in May -- well below Wall Street's expectations and the smallest number of jobs added in the past eight months -- and the unemployment rate rose to 9.1 percent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' latest snapshot. For the labor market to simply keep up with population growth, experts say a bare minimum of 125,000 jobs must be added each month. In the two years since the Great Recession officially ended, economists say, there has been little labor market recovery.

Throughout the last 14 months of job creation, growth has been unevenly distributed, with the majority of new jobs being created in low-paying industries. This trend continued in May. Of the 54,000 jobs added, the biggest gainer was professional and business services -- mostly in accounting and bookkeeping, jobs that pay an annual median wage of just $32,510, according to the BLS. Health care and mining continued to add jobs as well, while manufacturing and state and local government lost workers.

Job gains from March and April were also revised down in May's report, from 221,000 to 194,000, and 244,000 to 232,000, respectively.

Economists stress that it is important to avoid placing too much emphasis on any single report. But collected together, the latest data suggest a soft patch at best and a seriously slowing economy at worst.

"This is not a fluke report," said Robert A. Dye, a senior economist for The PNC Financial Services Group. "We are seeing broad-based evidence here of a softer economy. And the danger here is that if we remain in this slow growth soft patch environment we could have a technically growing economy and not generate any new jobs at all."

After a slow start in January due in large part to nasty weather, the U.S. economy added, on average, around 220,000 jobs for the past three months, even as oil prices rose, the Middle East erupted and natural disasters shook Japan. But the past month has produced a constellation of signs that the jobs growth from the first half of this year will not be sustained.

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Manufacturing -- a bright spot for more than a year since the recession officially ended in June 2009 -- expanded in May at its slowest pace in 20 months. Construction remains near rock bottom, as the housing market stays stagnant, held back by an ongoing foreclosure mess and low demand for new homes.

Meanwhile, consumer sentiment fell last month to a six-month low. Today's report could sink that number even lower if anxiety about a slowing economy fuels a self-fulfilling prophecy in which consumers save their money and employers decline to hire.

"If you put the last year together now we basically have stood still. In order to have a recovery, you have to have job growth to make up for the losses in the recession. That hasn't happened yet," said Lawrence Katz, Professor of Economics at Harvard University.

Even after accounting for population growth and jobs lost since the beginning of the Great Recession, the U.S. economy still shows a deficit of more than 11 million jobs as of May.

"It's a scary report to get, entering a summer with people leaving school and trying to enter the labor force," Katz said. "Even with a robust recovery it would take at least 5 years to return to where we were before the crash. At the current pace, it would take forever."

The labor force participation rate remained unchanged in May at 64.2 percent -- where it has been frozen since January. The last time the participation rate dropped below this benchmark was in March 1984. This means that the nearly five million discouraged workers who dropped out of the labor force since the beginning of the recession have not yet returned to the workplace or the job hunt.

Unemployment spells are also growing longer -- the average duration hit 39.7 weeks, another new record. The long term unemployed now make up 45.1 percent of unemployed workers. This is an increasingly worrisome problem, as numerous studies show that the long-term unemployed have more difficulty finding work than those already working.

Additionally, temporary hiring has ground to a halt, indicating that firms are not even stocking up on temporary workers.

Of course, Katz says, even with a labor market this weak, it is always possible for some people to still do very well. At elite universities like Harvard, where Katz teaches, many students graduate and quickly go on to successful and lucrative careers. But the damage sustained to the struggling portions of the population -- black men over 20, for example, have an unemployment rate of 17.5 percent in May -- can have seriously damaging effects on society as a whole.

As The Huffington Post reported last week, the divide between corporate profits and ordinary Americans' paychecks continues to widen. In the first quarter of the year, banks' profits soared and executive bonuses rose -- a confirmation that for much of corporate America, the effects of the recession are in the rear-view mirror.

"The biggest worry would be forgetting about this group that is struggling and turning into a society where there is an elite group of people who go to elite universities and work on Wall Street and get bailed out and do very well, while the majority of Americans struggle." Katz said. "This can affect society and affect what we think of ourselves as a society in very troubling ways."

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For months, economists, government officials and headlines proclaimed that the labor market recovery was "gaining traction." Today's monthly unemployment report dealt a severe blow to that scenario, r...
For months, economists, government officials and headlines proclaimed that the labor market recovery was "gaining traction." Today's monthly unemployment report dealt a severe blow to that scenario, r...
 
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0 minute ago (2:42 PM)
UI benefits need to continue until the unemployme­nt rate is at a normal level. That might light a fire under some of their asses.
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bongoboy69
4 hours ago (10:22 AM)
thanks for destroying our economy, republican party!
4 hours ago (10:20 AM)
You can not starve the country into prosperity­. Business's are like militia's they have there own agenda create wealth for their stockholde­rs. The Tax cuts have done nothing to spur jobs. Business's won't invest in anything but overseas markets. We need leadership and vision, like we had during FDR. The gov needs to invest in a jobs program that will spur economic results and get money flowing again.
12 hours ago (2:31 AM)
When you allow all those illegals in the country and at the same time do nothing about companies that decide to save money by outsourcin­g what do you expect? Also having an un-regulat­ed financial market allowing more speculatio­n on commodotie­s and oil futures by just about anyone who decides to take a gamble by creating high/unaff­ordable energy prices, what do you expect? The consumer can't continue to spend and create job growth with high energy prices in place like they have been for 10 years now, until that is regulated again, unemployme­nt will stay at the current level. RIght now the consumer is uncertain about the future with the countries financial mess so they don't spend.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bongoboy69
4 hours ago (10:23 AM)
racist
16 hours ago (11:07 PM)
With more Americans entering the workforce than there are jobs, why does the U.S. give out 125,000 work visas each month?

http://www­.numbersus­a.com/cont­ent/nusabl­og/beckr/a­ugust-19-2­009/125000­-brand-new­-foreign-w­orkers-wor­k-permits-­each-month­-heres-pro­of.h
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bongoboy69
4 hours ago (10:23 AM)
dont change the subject; the republican party is destroying our economy
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olitenup
12:07 PM on 6/05/2011
This is about corporate America having been bailed out, now hording the money, paying themselves outrageous salaries and bonuses and still moving jobs and money off shore. Oh, let us not forget the corporate donations we give to those already hugely successful­, record-set­ting profit making corporatio­ns.

This is about all of us sitting on our couches, getting fat and letting the robbing of American happen to begin with.
11:48 AM on 6/05/2011
Yes - here is the result of "Hope and Change." Businesses are holding back while the Obama Socialism washes over our fair land. They cannot add employees if the government is going to force them to pay for medical care. So...they wait.
22 hours ago (4:53 PM)
Didn't even read the article did you? 54,000 Jobs were created. 1 Million since recession ended in June 2009, Positive GDP growth. All without the help of any GOPERS. Ok. So, what happened to the 10 Million Jobs the GOPERS and J Boehner promised would be created by last years Bush Tax Cut Extensions­? For that matter... What happened to the "ownership society" and "economic prosperity­" Bush/Chene­y/GOPERS promised back in 2001 and 2003 when the Tax Cuts for Billionair­es was passed?
20 hours ago (6:35 PM)
Last time I checked, the President still has to sign of on these tax extensions for them to be law. He has the ability to veto such spending bills. There needs to come a time where the current administra­tion has to take accountabi­lity for the economy

As far as the recession ending in Jun 2009, I'm sure there are as many people that would argue that it has ended as would argue when it began.
18 hours ago (8:52 PM)
54,000 jobs is NOTHING. Our President is leading this nation on a stampede toward socialism.
7 hours ago (7:27 AM)
But we need to be creating about 350K /month to get back to solid single digit unemployme­nt. Barry has a long way to go.
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bongoboy69
4 hours ago (10:25 AM)
the republican party has decimated our economy; stop changing the subject; republican­s hate America and theyre trying to destroy it
11:40 AM on 6/05/2011
Oh wow spent trillions and got what? 54K jobs for 400 million Americans? lol now I cant wait to get him out of there. He is so disconnect­ed Unless it is a Union job.
Get out of office soon Obama, we will keep our change/
22 hours ago (4:56 PM)
Oh Wow! Spent $Trillions­$ ($2.4) on Tax Cuts for Billionair­es/Million­aires and got what? Jobs in China and India? Boehner /Canter/GO­PERS said that extending the Bush Tax Cuts would created 10 Million Jobs (850,000 per month) in 2011, what happened to that plan?
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Nelson Jacobsen
10:51 AM on 6/05/2011
The US used to supply 80 percent of the world's entertainm­ent. We almost export no music today.The world still wants cds,dvds, blu ray and even cassettes. BTW the physical still rules here too.

IMHO music is the one of those areas of growth that allows us to move to art not arms. To fix this we need to ask when major stars release a new recording project, This same record needs to show up as an export.

If the, majors, don't change their mandate to earn the most money for their investors. That's fine. However, the consumers of those goods needs to understand that more often then naught the major stars overseas sales come from overseas packaged and distribute­d operations­. Maybe the stars need to make sure it's helping our economy they do have a say.

The indie community is just waiting for the gov to understand who we need to support in the entertainm­ent world us made music needs to be more then a tax dodge. Let's move forward. Plus- This allows us as citizen to speak directly to the fan and music is magic it has no borders; So that fan can be down town anywhere..­.

I openly ask candidate for office to use US MADE MUSIC at campaign stops-- equally apply's to political commercial­s That one act will spur the local economy in the foot print of each artists/ba­nd the candidates EMPLOY.

It works for farm goods, it works for music http://buy­indiesuppo­rtlocals.o­rg
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robert horwitz
08:57 AM on 6/05/2011
Politician­s keep saying that folks just can't get their heads around the numbers. Maybe the Politician­s can't but I don't seem to have any trouble doing it. Let's just for an example take the number of 54,000 jobs having been created this month. Think of it this way. That's like the number of cards in 1000 decks of playing cards including the Jokers. Think of the Jokers as our elected representa­tives in Washington­. See this isn't so difficult after all.
iam99
To know what you prefer...
04:50 AM on 6/05/2011
Trade agreements have sent millions of jobs out of the country. Illegal, unnecessar­y wars have kept the energy of youth bound up when they should be working here and raising their families. Slick wall street shysters have purchased the government for special favors. Billions, trillions of dollars have gone to the elite by various means to maintain the very sick status quo. It all presents a very dim future. Did you have a dream? Too bad.
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Catholic Charities
02:00 AM on 6/05/2011
Katz is warning of impending physical class warfare. Who can read these stats and still think it's ok to let 25 million illegals stay in this country. This is a race to the bottom. People need to start putting America and Americans first.
11:19 PM on 6/04/2011
Obama is probably not a bad person but he has no economic experience and is in over his head. This is what happens when you vote for a slogan and a personalit­y instead of real world experience and success.
It's time to send this failure home in 2013.
22 hours ago (4:58 PM)
And replace Barack with Who or What exactly?
19 hours ago (8:02 PM)
Anything or anyone would be an improvemen­t at this point.
21 hours ago (5:30 PM)
Well said, very well said. Obama is a huge disappoint­ment to so many Americans who thought he was "the answer". I'll be the first to admit I was one of the first people to be enamored by him in the beginning, but by the time election day rolled around I had come to my senses.
21 hours ago (5:38 PM)
And you think McCain/Pal­in would have done what exactly?
21 hours ago (5:40 PM)
Oops, I meant to click "Reply" to Iwill's post. So let me say it again. Iwill, very well said.

@4TJeffers­on - "And replace Barack with Who or What exactly?" Huh? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe we are stuck with him until the next election. And when that time comes, I pray those with good sense will get the power, and those with the power will get good sense.
10:58 PM on 6/04/2011
Since the NC Governor has issued the EB for NC...does this qualify those who previously exhausted and/or the 99ers??
10:18 PM on 6/04/2011
Vote OUT in 2011