The US economy added 321,000 payroll jobs in November, the best in
almost three years. Strong upward revisions to September and October
numbers boosted the 12-month gain to 2,756,000, a new high for the
recovery.
The
official unemployment rate was unchanged at 5.8 percent. The broad
unemployment rate, U-6, which takes into account discouraged workers and
involuntary part-time workers, fell to a new low of 11.4 percent.
Although
these data indicate a return to normal in many respects, distortions
remain. One of the most conspicuous is an elevated rate of long-term
unemployment. As the chart shows, the term structure of
unemployment remains substantially different from the prerecession
pattern:
On
the one hand, we see that the short-term unemployment rate, made up of
people who are out of work for four weeks or less, has not only returned
to its pre-recession level, but has actually dropped below it. In 2007,
short-term unemployment averaged 1.66 percent of the labor force; now
it is 1.61 percent. Most unemployment in this category is voluntary,
representing a minimum time needed for job search, interviews, moving,
and perhaps a quick vacation between jobs. It includes people who find
work soon after entering or reentering the labor force or find a new job
quickly after leaving a former one. >>>Read more
Follow this link to view or download a brief slideshow with charts of the latest US employment situation
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