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Seasonal retail hiring for the months of October and November has declined by more than a third year over year as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to rage across the country.
The major recovery in the jobs market has started to show fatigue as 2020 comes to an end.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Released its METROPOLITAN AREA EMPLOYMENT AND UNEMPLOYMENT — OCTOBER 2020, the latest month available. The U.S. jobless rate for the month was 6.9%, not...
The reality of 2020 is that good and bad economic numbers just do not matter. That will not last forever, but right now that is the case.
Job losses rose by 45% year over year in November to nearly 65,000. The data was reported Thursday by job outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
Certain occupations are, for a variety of reasons unrelated to the pandemic, becoming increasingly obsolete. This rail transportation job is disappearing the fastest.
The decline in employment in the 10 largest counties over the past year is breathtakingly large. The largest was in New Jersey.
These are the 20 jobs that will have the largest declines in the coming year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The U.S. Labor Department has released its reading on jobless claims for the week of November 7, 2020.
October's CEO turnover rate fell by 23% month over month and by 47% year over year. Uncertain economic conditions are likely a major contributor to the decline.
The latest data show that Black American unemployment was 80% higher than for white Americans last month.
Wall Street probably didn't even bother to pay attention to Friday's stellar jobs report. Right now it is all about the election and vote counting.
Thursday's financial news included two key reports on the employment picture ahead of Friday's key unemployment report.
U.S. employers announced more than 80,000 job cuts in October, the lowest monthly total since February. While that indicates improvement, job cuts planned for this year have already topped 2.1...
There may not yet be a hiring recession happening again, but small businesses are tempering some of their hiring and rehiring as the new wave of COVID-19 cases increases the odds of another shutdown.