Search   Advanced Search
LATEST NEWS
 
 
News
 Latest Headlines
 Quick Facts
 Breaking News
 Top Stories
 Feature Articles
 Politics
 US Policy
 General
 Commodities
 Canadian
 UK
 Indian
 Wallstreet Events
 US Economic News
 European Economic News
 Asian Economic News
 All Economic News
 FX Top Stories
 Currency Alerts
 Mkt Sensitive News
 Politics
 European Mkt Updates
 Asian Mkt Updates
 Treasury Mkt Updates
 Pop
 Rock
 Classic Rock
 Rap/Hip-Hop
 Country
 Alternative
 Oldies
 Movie Reviews
 DVD Releases
 Box Office
 Slide Shows
 Business News
Commentary/Analysis
 Daily Market Analysis
 US Market Updates
 US Commentary
 Asian Commentary
 European Commentary
 Canadian Commentary
 Indian Commentary
 Sector/Market Trends
Stock Alerts
 Stocks To Watch
 Long Term Stocks
 Before the Bell
 $5 and Under
 After the Bell
 Intraday Updates
 IPOs
 Hot Stocks
Earnings Calendars
 Upcoming Earnings
 Latest Earnings
 Pos Pre Announcements
 Neg Pre Announcements
Corporate Calendars
 Stock Splits
 Stock Buybacks
 Dividends
 Conference Calls
 FDA Calendar
 Board Meetings
 Mergers & Acquisitions
Ratings Changes
 Upgrades
 Downgrades
 Coverage Initiations
 Coverage Reiterated
 All Videos
 Market Commentary
 Top Stories
 Economic News
 Political News
 Foreign Markets
 Corporate News
 Entertainment News
 Top Stories
 Earnings
 Mergers & Acquisitions
 Market Commentary
 Economic News
 IPOs and New Issues
 Corporate News
 Forex News
 Interviews
 Private Equity
Economic Calendar
RTT DeskAlert
  Trading Center
US Economic News
Treasury Economist: Unemployment Numbers Disappointing But Not Unexpected
11/6/2009 4:32 PM ET
TOP MARKET NEWS
Stocks Close Mostly Lower Amid Disappointing Quarterly Results - U.S. Commentary
Stocks Remain Stuck In The Red In Mid-Afternoon Trading - U.S Commentary
Stocks Posting Moderate Losses In Early Afternoon Trading - U.S. Commentary
New Guidelines Recommend Women Wait Until 21 For Cervical Cancer Screening
Stocks Seeing Further Downside In Late Morning Trading - U.S. Commentary
(RTTNews) -  Obama Administration officials sought Friday to highlight hopeful economic signs in the face of unemployment figures showing 10.2 percent of Americans out of work.

Treasury Chief Economist and Assistant Secretary for Economic Policy Alan Krueger said that although the overall unemployment rate was "disappointing," it had not come as a surprise.

"The numbers are not altogether unexpected," he said. "The private consensus predicted the unemployment rate would be 10 percent at the end of this year and, indeed, that Administration's Mid-Session Review forecast was that the unemployment rate would average 10 percent in this quarter."

Krueger also noted that the rate at which the economy has been shedding jobs was decreasing.

"The October decline in payrolls is about 30,000 less than the Q3 average," Krueger said. "But we will not be satisfied until … job growth is also positive."

He added, "As I have said in previous months, less bad is not good enough."
Krueger also pointed to an increase in the automotive sector and parts manufactures of 4,600 jobs as well as an unchanged public sector as benefitting from government support.

"The temporary help services industry, often seen as a leading indicator for labor demand, added 33,700 jobs in October," he said. "The October jobs report comes amidst signs that the economy is recovering. Last week we learned that real GDP grew 3.5 percent in Q3, the largest increase in two years. Importantly, the growth in GDP was widespread across major components."

He added, "Even excluding autos, housing, and federal spending, the economy grew last quarter, and the trend over the past few quarters is in a favorable direction."

However Krueger noted that employment generally tends to lag behind growth in the economy and said the administration economic team was continuing to explore options to boost job growth.

"Lowering unemployment will require a period of sustained growth," he said. "That is what the policies of this Administration are designed to create and that is what we've started to see."

He added, "Creating jobs will require an effort across many fronts. … We are looking at ideas such as additional investments in our aging infrastructure, tax cuts to encourage businesses to create jobs, steps to increase the flow of credit to small businesses, and an aggressive agenda to promote exports and help American manufacturers sell their products around the world."

 1   2   Next Page 

Share Article:   Del.icio.us    Digg    Y! My Web    Facebook    My Space

Email        Print        

 

More Economic News-US

18  Fed's Fisher: "Too-Big-To-Fail" Must Be Addressed
17  Philly Fed Index Shows Much Bigger Than Expected Increase In November
16  Leading Indicators Index Increases For Seventh Straight Month In October
15  Philly Fed Index Jumps To 16.7 In November
14  Leading Indicators Index Rose 0.3% In October
13  Fed's Plosser: Dollar's Slide Expected
12  New Jobless Claims Come In Unchanged, Remain Above 500,000
11  Weekly Jobless Claims Unchanged At 505,000
10  OECD Raises 2010 GDP Growth Outlook; Sees China Leading Global Recovery
OECD Lifts 2010 GDP Growth Forecast
MBA: Purchase Applications Drop To Lowest Level In 12 Years
Fed's Bullard: Interest Rates Might Remain Low For The Next Few Years
Housing Starts Show Unexpected Decrease In October
Consumer Prices Increase By A Little More Than Expected In October
Canada's Annual Inflation Rises For First Time Since May

 

Copyright © 2009 RTTNews. All rights reserved. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Service.

Feedback| Terms of Service | How To Use RTTNews.com| Advertise| Buy Content | RSS