Job’s

October 12, 2008

Barclays to cut 3,000 after Lehman deal

Layoffs will amount to over 10% of combined investment banking, trading operations.
by Barney Gimbel and Peter GumbelOctober
10, 2008: 6:37 AM ET

LONDON (Fortune) — Barclays PLC will cut about 3,000 jobs in the aftermath of its purchase of bankrupt Lehman Brothers’ North American investment banking and capital markets businesses, Fortune has learned.
In September, the third-largest British bank acquired Lehman operations that include fixed income and equities sales, trading, and research and investment banking. About 10,000 employees worked in those groups at Lehman, which is now part of a unit known as Barclays Capital.

Micron to cut 2,850 jobs

The memory chip maker will eliminate nearly 15% of its workers and close a factory,a result of decreased demand.
October 9, 2008: 2:08 PM ET

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Micron Technology Inc. will close a factory and cut about 15% of its work force around the world as part of a restructuring of its computer memory chip operations.
Of the 2,850 jobs being cut, about 1,500 will be in Boise, where the semiconductor company is headquartered.

Virginia orders 570 state layoffs

Governor says state nearly $1B short this year, plans cuts to college funding, puts off state employee raises.
October 9, 2008: 12:10 PM ET

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine is laying off 570 state workers as the state’s budget outlook worsens amid the global financial crisis.
The cuts are the deepest in at least five years in Virginia. Kaine also said Thursday morning that college funding is being cut, state employee raises are being postponed and another 800 jobs will go unfilled.

October 10, 2008

Normally I provide the link to the article but in this case I felt it was important to put the whole article here today. I hope CNN does not mind.

Hunterseeker

Some state unemployment funds drying up

Story Highlights

  • Ten states operating on reserves of less than six months of unemployment benefits
  • Unemployment expected to rise after reaching 6.1 percent nationwide in August
  • Funds generated by taxes on employers based on number of employees
  • Economists say states need to restructure tax base to generate more funding

By Emanuella Grinberg
CNN

(CNN) — The demand for unemployment benefits across the country has put a strain on state unemployment funds, with such funds in at least 10 states facing insolvency in 2009, according to a policy group.
Nationwide, unemployment reached 6.1 percent, or roughly 9.1 million people, in August, up from 4.7 percent in 2007, and is expected to continue rising. The U.S. Department of Labor said that in August, claims for unemployment benefits reached their highest levels since 2001, in large part because of hurricane activity on the Gulf Coast.
With a weekly average of 474,000 new applicants in August, in a system already looking after about 3.5 million people each week, the growing rate of recipients has nearly depleted unemployment funds in several states.
“There are some real serious problems with unemployment funding that need to be addressed,” said Andrew Stettner, deputy director of the National Employment Law Project, a policy group that advocates on behalf of unemployed and low-wage workers.
The group, which tracks legislation and activity related to state and federal unemployment benefits, says that California, Michigan, Missouri, New York, Ohio, South Carolina, Wisconsin, Indiana, Kentucky and Arkansas have less than six months’ worth of unemployment trust fund reserves, putting the funds at high risk of insolvency.
On Tuesday, California state officials told lawmakers in a hearing that their unemployment reserve fund was on track to run dry by March based on the state’s forecast unemployment rate, which hit 7.7 percent in August.
Last month, South Carolina Employment Security Commission chief Ted Halley said his state’s fund was also projected to run out by January. As of August, the state’s unemployment rate was 7.6 percent.
Eight more are on the cusp, based on a formula that projects the amount of money the state would need in a recession.
“These states are not ready for a recession, and they’re going to see a big hit if we have a protracted job slump,” Stettner said. “We’re going to see them seriously in the red, but they can take some action and not be swimming in red ink.”
Trust fund revenue comes from payroll taxes on employers, based on a tax system set at the state level. But, as the amount paid out in unemployment claims has risen, the terms set to generate revenue largely have remained static, combining with the current economic downturn to create a climate that economists say many states are ill-equipped to bear.
Economists blame the situation on the failure of states to beef up their reserves when the economy was in better shape.
“When times were good, instead of putting money into a trust fund, lawmakers gave in to anti-tax fervor and refused to raise taxes to build up a healthy trust fund,” said Ross Eisenbrey, vice president of the Economic Policy Institute. “Now, as payrolls decline and tax revenue declines, there is less money going into funds that were already running low.”
Eisenbrey said he expects the health of state trust funds to worsen before it improves.
“The economy has been hit hard the past year. Housing deflation, oil price shocks and flat wages have been reducing consumer demand, and now the credit crisis is causing businesses to lay off more workers, so it’s kind of a negative loop that feeds back into the economy,” said Eisenbrey, pointing out that median household income has declined since 2000, a first since the World War II era.
When reserves run dry, states can borrow from the federal government’s unemployment trust fund. Typically, states have a year to repay the loan without accruing interest.
Michigan, which has the country’s highest unemployment rate, at 8.1 percent, is already borrowing from the federal government, even though it is not in the red just yet, according to a spokesman.
“We’ve been attempting to borrow money and pay it back as soon as we can,” said Norm Isotalo, a spokesman for the Michigan Department of Labor and Economic Growth. He attributed rising unemployment claims to the embattled automotive industry and its ripple effect across the state.
“We want to be able to have enough money to cover our forecasts,” said Isotalo, adding that the state borrowed from the federal government in the mid-1990s for similar reasons.
But the forecast is not all doom and gloom, provided the states shore up their reserves, with the help of the federal government and through initiatives of their own, Stettner said.
Historically, first and fourth quarters are low periods for generating revenue that state trust funds so desperately need. But Stettner’s group advocates an increase in the tax base that contributes to state trust funds, a move that could be a hard sell considering the timing.
The group has also pushed for legislation that would allow the federal government to transfer funds from its reserve to the states, provided they put programs into place that would loosen the requirements for unemployment benefits eligibility among low-wage workers and part-time workers.
“Many of the states facing solvency challenges could be going into red as early as 2009, but it’s still early enough for them to get out of it,” he said. “The trick is to make a system that’s self-financing.”

September 5, 2008:

State of Working America 2008/2009

Released in time for Labor Day, the advanced edition of EPI’s authoritative volume The State of Working America 2008/2009 is now available. Described as the “most comprehensive independent analysis of the U.S. labor market” by the Financial Times, the 11th edition shows that the business cycle that started in 2001 will be one for the record books. For more information go to Economic Policy Institute

August 8, 2008:

Bureau of Labor Statistics

Employment Situation Summary

US unemployment rate rises to four-year high

By Alex Lantier
2 August 2008
The US unemployment rate rose to a seasonally adjusted, four-year high of 5.7 percent in July, according to August 1 figures released by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The number of officially unemployed people reached 8.8 million, up 1.6 million (1 percent) over the last year.

August 5, 2008:

The Terminator is Terminating

I’ll Be Back! Well he’s back and with a vengeance and we don‘t have to wait for 2029. Will somebody call Kyle Reese out of retirement, his services are needed again!
Sarah Connor hang on to your pantaloons, I hope you are not in California!

Well, I couldn’t help getting those lines in, but seriously things are looking grim in California and I begin to wonder how many other states will follow his example. Well, that makes 200,000 that won’t be voting for him next time around.


Arnold Schwarzenegger lays off 10,000 California workers to ease budget crisis
Order could reduce pay of 200,000 to federal minimum wage
Move marks effort to reduce $15bn state budget
deficit
Dan Glaister in Los Angeles
The Guardian, Saturday August 2 2008

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/aug/01/usa2

Arnold Schwarzenegger, the governor of California, delivered on his threat to lay off thousands of state employees on Thursday when he signed an executive order in an attempt to solve the state’s budget crisis.

August 4, 2008 Update:

Looming job cuts march on – report 7:30 am: The number of job cuts announced in July jumps 26%. Airlines and financial firms top the list, according to a monthly study.

Wall Street wobbles into weekend

EW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Stocks slipped Friday, completing a topsy-turvy week, as investors mulled a seventh straight month of job losses, a dismal quarterly report from General Motors and slumping U.S. auto sales reports.

From Washington there is the report released by Speaker Nancy Pelosi

WASHINGTON, Aug 1 Pelosi-JobLoss-report


WASHINGTON, Aug 1 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Speaker Nancy Pelosi today issued the following statement after the Department of Labor released its employment report for July showing a loss of 51,000 jobs, and an unemployment rate that climbed to 5.7 percent — the highest since March 2004. The economy has lost 463,000 jobs in the past seven months:

Job losses continue to climb

Unemployment continued its long climb in July, and employers slashed jobs for the seventh-straight month, as the labor market continued…
By Neil Irwin
The Washington Post
Unemployment continued its long climb in July, and employers slashed jobs for the seventh-straight month, as the labor market continued a slow but steady deterioration that is walloping American workers.

Economists React: U.S. Still ‘Bleeding Jobs’

Economists and others weigh in on the decline in U.S. payrolls and the increase in the unemployment rate.

This was the seventh straight decline in total employment and the eighth straight drop in private sector jobs. Most of the 665,000 private sector jobs lost in those eight months have been in the goods producing industries.

2 Responses to “Job’s”

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  2. ohio unemployment Says:

    Washington — Budget shortfalls are looming larger in several U.S. states as the year draws to a close and revenues drop with the economic slowdown, officials said.

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