September 6, 2008
Jobless rate hits 6.1 percent
Housing, credit, financial problems shake economy
Page 2 of 2
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Slower growth overseas will probably cause exports to fall off just as Americans are cutting their spending and the benefits of the rebates disappear.

Job losses were widespread at factories - especially housing-related manufacturers and automakers - as well as construction companies, retailers, mortgage brokers, real-estate firms, hotels and motels, and temporary-help firms, which are looked at as a barometer of demand for future hiring.

Those losses swamped employment gains in government, education, health care and elsewhere.

After the last recession, in 2001, the unemployment rate rose as high as 6.3 percent in June 2003.

By historical standards, the country is far from the employment carnage seen more than two decades ago, when unemployment climbed above 10 percent in the early 1980s.

Still, some groups are being hit harder than others. The jobless rate for blacks jumped to 10.6 percent last month, the highest since late 2005. The unemployment rate for Hispanics rose to 8 percent, a five-year high.

Presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain seized on the job figures to attack each other's proposals to turn the economy around.

"The working men and women I meet every day are working harder for less," Obama said. He advocates tax cuts for working families and investment in road, bridges and other projects to lift the economy.

McCain vowed to "fight for those that lost their jobs, savings and real-estate investments." He said tax reductions for people and businesses, job training and measures to promote trade will help ease the economic woes.

The latest employment snapshot was worse than economists were forecasting. They were expecting payrolls to drop by around 75,000 in August and the jobless rate to tick up a notch, to 5.8 percent.

The White House was disappointed, too.

"There is no question that the labor market is not as strong as we'd like," said press secretary Dana Perino. "We want to see the economy return to job growth, and we understand that this is a difficult time for many Americans. We want everyone who wants to work to be able to find a job."

Wages went up modestly last month, but prices rose faster.

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Posted By: DavisJms7 (7:33am 09-07-2008)
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Our Republican Governor Manchin said he created 24,000 jobs in WVa...didn't that bring us to the top of the employment ladder. No other state in the nation can boast creating that many jobs, or was he just lying to us dumb illiterate West Virginians like the republicans have been doing for the past eight years and will continue to do for another four years if they are elected to office?

Posted By: True American (4:49pm 09-06-2008)
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TO:ANDREW
I couldn't have said it better, myself. Great statement. May I add that I wonder how women in WV can vote for a woman who's nicknames are "barracuda, pit-bull and killa from Wasilla" and think that is a positive role model for their daughters or grand-daughters. With nicknames like that I suspect, rightly, that this women has sliced-and-diced her way to the top and men were not her only victims. I worked almost 50 years in WV and other states and believe me I encountered a few barracudas, pit-bulls and killas, and I can tell you that eventually they all ran out of victims and had no support net-work which eventually resulted in their demise. Did you hear what I said about "victims" because that is exactly what we all will be if she is elected VP. John McCain must be either nuts or thinking with his you-know-what. He'll be the first slice-and-dice victim.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH.

Posted By: Madman (1:22pm 09-06-2008)
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Good for you "Andrew". The Republican party is has lost its way and is a joke. McCain will administer the Bush ideas and not do anything positive for the economy. I would hate to think of Palin as president. What another joke.

Posted By: luckylouie (11:50am 09-06-2008)
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amen, andrew

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