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US job cuts at a five year high | US job cuts at a five year high |
(10 minutes later) | |
US employers cut 159,000 jobs in September, the most in more than five years, Labor Department figures show. | US employers cut 159,000 jobs in September, the most in more than five years, Labor Department figures show. |
The data also showed the nation's unemployment rate was steady at 6.1% as more workers were added to the ranks of the unemployed than analysts predicted. | The data also showed the nation's unemployment rate was steady at 6.1% as more workers were added to the ranks of the unemployed than analysts predicted. |
The figures mark the ninth month in a row that the economy has lost jobs. | The figures mark the ninth month in a row that the economy has lost jobs. |
Meanwhile, revised figures show that employers cut 73,000 jobs in August, slightly less than the 84,000 originally estimated. | Meanwhile, revised figures show that employers cut 73,000 jobs in August, slightly less than the 84,000 originally estimated. |
But the job losses in July turned out to be a bit deeper - 67,000 versus the 60,000 previously reported. | But the job losses in July turned out to be a bit deeper - 67,000 versus the 60,000 previously reported. |
The number of jobs axed in September was the largest amount since March 2003, when the labour market was still reeling from the 2001 recession. | The number of jobs axed in September was the largest amount since March 2003, when the labour market was still reeling from the 2001 recession. |
"The employment figures were weak in every important dimension," said Pierre Ellis, senior economist at Decision Economics in New York. | "The employment figures were weak in every important dimension," said Pierre Ellis, senior economist at Decision Economics in New York. |
"We've seen weaker data in history, but these look pretty decisively to be the beginning of something worse. Employment declines were widespread and large." | "We've seen weaker data in history, but these look pretty decisively to be the beginning of something worse. Employment declines were widespread and large." |
Manufacturers shed 51,000 jobs, construction companies cut 35,000 jobs, retailers lost 40,000 posts, business services axed 27,000 positions and financial services slashed 17,000 jobs. | |
There were also 17,000 posts cut in the leisure and hospitality sector. | |
The number of jobs being shed outstripped hiring gains by the government in education, health and other sectors. |
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