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Employers Announce 39,358 cuts in June
CHICAGO, July 1, 2010 – Employers announced plans to cut 39,358
jobs from their payrolls in June, a slight (1.4 percent) increase from the
previous month’s 38,810 announced layoffs. This marks the third consecutive
month in which announced job cuts totaled less than 40,000, according to the
latest job-cuts report released Thursday by global outplacement consultancy
Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc.
Heading into the second half of 2010, the pace of downsizing has slowed
significantly from a year ago. The job-cut total for each month this year,
including June, was lower than the same month in 2009. June job cuts were 47
percent lower than the 74,393 announced a year ago.
Overall, employers announced 297,677 job cuts in the first six months of
2010. That is 67 percent below the 896,675 layoffs in the first half of 2009 and
the lowest six-month total since 2000, when the mid-year total was 223,421.
Job-cut activity, which was relatively slow in the first quarter, declined
even further in the second quarter. Planned job cuts announced from April
through June totaled 116,494, a 36 percent drop from the 181,183 planned cuts
reported in the first three months of the year. The second-quarter was 63
percent lower than the same period a year ago, when employers announced
318,165 layoffs.
“While some may question the sustainability of this recovery, the
dramatic decline in planned layoffs over the past six months certainly suggests
that the nation’s employers are not anticipating a double-dip recession. With
the exception of organizations in the government and non-profit sector,
employers are looking six months ahead and apparently do not see a reason to
make additional reductions in payrolls,” said John A. Challenger, chief
executive officer of Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
The government and non-profit sector has continued to struggle even as
other areas of the economy begin to recover. It is the leading job-cut sector so far this year with 98,776 announced layoffs, including 5,306 in June. Since
January 2008, employers in this sector have announced a total of 346,674 job
cuts.
While the government/non-profit sector has been the top job-cutting
industry in the three months prior to June, job cuts last month were topped by
the computer industry. The 9,085 job cuts announced by computer firms in June represent the highest monthly total for the sector since May 2009 (15,384).
Even with the June surge, the computer sector has announced just 16,964
job cuts this year, 67 percent fewer than the 51,461 announced in the first six
months of 2009. In terms of year-to-date job cuts, the computer sector ranks
fourth behind government, pharmaceutical (34,987), and retail (26,181).
“Job cuts this year have declined for each of the top-five job-cutting
industries. Even cuts in the government and non-profit sector are down, albeit
not as dramatically as the other leading job-cut sectors. This certainly bodes well for the job market as we enter the second half of 2010,” said Challenger.
“Those who have jobs can feel more secure and those who are looking
may start to see some success. We already have seen some job creation this
year, with payrolls growing by 982,000 jobs between January and May,
according to government data. However, it is important to remember that job
creation in the nascent stages of the recovery can fluctuate heavily from month to month,” he noted.
“But, looking ahead, most employers are growing more and more
confident and this will inevitably lead to increased hiring,” he added.
The latest survey among chief executive officers of the nation’s largest
employers provides further evidence of the job market’s growing strength. The latest survey, which is conducted quarterly by the Business Roundtable, found that in the second quarter, 79 percent of CEOs expect to enjoy increased sales over the next six months. Forty-three percent expect capital spending to increase and 39 percent anticipate increased hiring in the next six months.
Those figures represent a vast improvement from the same quarter a year
ago, when just 34 percent of CEOs expected sales to grow; 12 percent expected increased capital spending; and only six percent foresaw employment gains.
“Unfortunately, even as business confidence continues to grow, hiring
will never occur as quickly as most people would like. We have seen nearly
one million Americans added to payrolls in the last six months, but that barely makes a dent in the more than eight million who joined the ranks of the
unemployed during the recession,” said Challenger.
“Hiring will accelerate in the coming months, but not before employers
maximize the productivity of their existing workers by adding new technology and increasing hours. In the meantime, the job market will remain fiercely competitive as the recently unemployed square off against the long-term unemployed as well as with job seekers re-entering the labor pool after
abandoning it out of frustration. These unemployed job seekers will also be
competing with people who are currently working in part-time jobs or jobs they don’t like and now feel more confident about seeking greener pastures,” said Challenger.
“Now is not the time for a passive job-search strategy that relies
primarily on answering internet help-wanted advertisements. In this
environment, job seekers must be aggressive. This means expanding one’s
network, meeting with people face-to-face everyday, cold-calling companies
that are not advertising job openings and being creative when it comes to selling yourself,” Challenger advised.
“As the second half of the year gets underway, job seekers should view it
as a new beginning; a chance to regroup and renew their resolve. For those
who have been out of work for a prolonged period – a year or more – it is
particularly important to remain vigilant in the job search.
“It may be time to consider relocation or switching industries. The longterm
unemployed may be forced to take a position he or she doesn’t want or
that doesn’t meet salary expectations. However, it is critical for these people to get back into the workforce in order to make themselves more marketable going forward,” he concluded.
For a full job statistics report, please visit: http://www.challengergray.com/press/PressRelease.aspx?PressUid=141
By: Challenger, Gray & Christmas
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