Today, private staffing and business services firm ADP released the latest installment of their National Employment Report
indicating that the situation for private employment in the U.S. took a
turn for the worse in September as private employers shed 39,000 more
jobs than they created in the month, the first monthly decline in eight
months, bringing the total employment level 0.33% below the level seen
in September 2009.
Goods-producing firms fared worse losing on net 45,000 jobs while service-providing firms added just 6,000 jobs nationwide.
Manufacturing
firms shed 17,000 jobs and construction firms lost 28,000 while all
size firms (1-49 employees, 50-499 employees and above 499 employees)
saw losses on the month.
Looking at the chart (click for
full-screen dynamic version) showing ADP’s total private nonfarm
payrolls since 2001 as well as the year-over-year and month-to-month
percent change, you can see that the so-called “recovery” has been both
anemic and, as of late, actually weakening.
Perusing the rest of the data in the ADP dataset
it’s obvious that our economy faces some significant headwinds coming
from the job market with continually collapsing goods-producing
payrolls and feeble trends service-producing payrolls.
Look for Friday’s BLS Employment Situation Report to likely show a similar weakening trend.
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