2011: A hiring boom, even at 9% unemployment
By Chris Isidore, senior writerJanuary 3, 2011: 3:02 PM ET
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- After three years of economic pain, a growing
number of economists think 2011 will finally bring what everyone's
been hoping for: More jobs and a self-sustaining recovery.
"We're looking at some leading indicators on employment, and
they're all flashing green lights," said Bernard Baumohl of
the Economic Outlook Group, a Princeton, N.J. research firm.
Though most economists still expect a painfully high unemployment
rate of about 9% at the end of this year, some think that stat
masks more important signs of strength.
Economists surveyed by CNNMoney
are forecasting an average of 2.5 million jobs added to the U.S.
economy this year, which would be
the best one-year gain in hiring since the white-hot labor market
of 1999.
Of the dozen economists who responded, several of the more
bullish are predicting more than 3 million jobs added -- about
250,000
jobs a month. Even the most pessimistic of those surveyed, David
Wyss of Standard & Poor's, expects 1.8 million jobs to be added
this year, roughly double the pace of hiring in 2010.
That wouldn't be enough to climb out of the 8-million job crater
created by the Great Recession and won't bring down the unemployment
rate by a significant amount. An improved job market could even
bring a short-term rise in the jobless rate, as those discouraged
from job hunting resume looking for work and are once again counted
as unemployed.
But the forecasted hiring boom could get the economy
back into gear and provide real relief for many Americans.
Those
projecting better hiring in 2011 point to a number of factors.
Among them, job openings by employers rose 17% from June to October
of last year, the most recent reading available from the Labor
Department, and are up by about a third compared to a year earlier.
And
there has been a downward trend in newly laid-off workers filing
for initial jobless claims, which fell below 400,000 in the most
recent reading for the first time since the summer of 2008. That
might have been distorted by the holiday season and bad weather,
but the four-week average is also at a two-plus year low.
On the
business front, capital expenditures -- typically followed by expansion
and hiring -- have been on the rise.
"Forecasters generally underestimate the strength of a recovery
once it is underway," said Bill Cheney, chief economist for
Manulife Asset Management. He's forecasting 2.5 million to 3 million
new jobs this year.
"Once things get moving, they feed on themselves," he
said. "There
is so much pent-up demand. People have been frugal for three years.
There will be a lot of new cars, a lot of new furniture, a lot
of people moving out of their parents' basement."
A rebound
in the creation of new jobs has the potential to help both the
still struggling housing market and the economy as a whole.
Many recent college grads or those who lost their homes or jobs
have been stuck living with friends or family members. As they
find work and move back out on their own, they'll have to spend.
About
3 million fewer jobs were added over the course of the past three
years compared to the annual average of first eight years
of the last decade.
"Jobs feed income and income feeds more consumer spending.
Consumer spending hasn't come back in a meaningful way compared
to other
recoveries," said Brett Ryan, economist with Deutsche Bank.
His firm forecasts consumer spending will finish 2010 up between
1.4% to 1.7% when the final numbers are in, but that will jump
to more than 3% growth next year.
Baumohl says another non-traditional
employment indicator, the number of day-care workers, has been
edging up for four months
and is now about 2% higher than a year ago. "People need more
day care when they've got jobs to go to," he said.
|