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Fewer job cuts in September, is relief coming?

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Layoff announcements hit their lowest level since March 2008 last month, signaling market stabilization. Global outplacement consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. put the number of cuts at 66,404 for September, a 13% decline from July's 76,456. Year-over-year, the number of layoffs announced is down 30%, and September was the fourth month in a row in which job cuts fell relative to the same month a year earlier.

Planned job cuts reached 240,233 for the third quarter of 2009, according to Challenger, its lowest level since the first quarter of 2008, when there were 200,656 planned layoffs. For the third quarter of this year, job cuts fell 24.5% from the previous quarter's 318,165, and it's off 16.3% from 287,142 in the third quarter of 2009. At the beginning of 2009, the planned layoff rate reached a seven-year high of 578,510. Since then, the planned layoff rate fell 58.5%.

Even with companies starting to shed fewer positions, 2009 is still on pace to exceed 2008's year-end job loss level of 1,223,993. Through September 2009, employers in the United States dropped 1,136,908 positions, up 49% from the September 2008 year-to-date total of 763,090.

Rick Cobb, executive vice president of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, says, "The downward trend in planned job-cut announcements is certainly a sign that employers feel more optimistic about future business conditions. Further evidence of this increased confidence was demonstrated earlier this week by a spate of merger activity. It could be a while before this increased confidence results in job creation, but we are going in the right direction."

The automotive sector felt the worst of the September job cuts, with 22,114 layoffs announced -- the highest since 24,172 jobs were cut in April. This year, companies in the auto sector have announced planned layoffs of 151,020, just off the record of 158,766 set in 2006. The government and non-profit market exceeded the auto industry, though, with 155,602 intended to be eliminated this year. Yet, this is still not as severe as the 177,215 jobs lost in this sector in 2003.

Cobb continues, "State and local governments are in a precarious situation. They are seeing their costs increase as more unemployed citizens rely on government-sponsored safety-net programs." He also notes, "These governments' income streams from income taxes, property taxes and corporate taxes are shrinking. We could continue to see heavy downsizing in this sector for several more months, until employment in these cities and states begins to recover."

Meanwhile, some sectors are improving. Industrial goods had 104,029 layoffs for the first three quarters of this year, with only 13,664 jobs cut in the third quarter -- compared to 60,332 in the first quarter. Retail job cuts were down 87% from the first quarter to the third.

"Retailers saw better-than-expected back-to-school sales," Cobb says, "which may bode well for the all-important holiday selling season. Retailers will hire extra seasonal workers this year, as they do every year. However, the hiring will not be robust by any measure. It may outpace last year's holiday hiring, but that is not saying much, considering retailers added the fewest seasonal workers in nearly 20 years."

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Last updated: November 22, 2009: 03:07 PM

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