US Jobs Loss Pace Slows in April
Posted on: May 2nd, 2008 | By Contrarian Profits | Filed under Featured, Financial News
The US economy still shed jobs in April — 20,000 of them — but the losses were less than in March. (Twenty thousand Americans loosing their jobs is, apparently, a reason to be optimistic.)
This from the AP news wire:
Employers cut far fewer jobs in April than in recent months and the unemployment rate dropped to 5 percent, a better-than-expected showing that nonetheless reveals strains in the nation’s labor market.
For the fourth month in a row, the economy lost jobs, the Labor Department reported Friday. But in April the losses totaled 20,000, an improvement from the 81,000 reductions in payrolls logged in March. Job losses for both February and March turned out to be a bit deeper than previously reported.
Economists had broadly predicted job cuts of 75,000.
Dave Gonigam in The Daily Reckoning has found a not-so-optimistic economic indicator: The Craigslist Misery Measurement.
The Craigslist Misery Measurement emerged in an AP story about people unloading prized possessions online. According to AP:
At Craigslist, which has become a kind of online flea market for the world, the number of for-sale listings has soared 70 percent since last July. In March, the number of listings more than doubled to almost 15 million from the year-ago period.
Behind the numbers are some genuinely sad stories:
The for-sale listings on the online hub Craigslist come with plaintive notices, like the one from the teenager in Georgia who said her mother lost her job and pleaded, “Please buy anything you can to help out.”
Or the seller in Milwaukee who wrote in one post of needing to pay bills — and put a diamond engagement ring up for bids to do it…
In Daleville, Ala., Ellona Bateman-Lee has turned to eBay and flea markets to empty her three-bedroom mobile home of DVDs, VCRs, stereos and televisions.
She said she needs the cash to help pay for soaring food and utility bills and mounting health care expenses since her husband, Bob, suffered an electric shock on the job as a dump truck driver in 2006 and is now disabled.
Among her most painful sales: her grandmother’s teakettle. She sold it for $6 on eBay.
“My grandmother raised me, so it hurt,” she said. “We’ve had bouts here and there, but we always got by. This time it’s different.”