Friday, June 6, 2008

Jobless Rate Rose to 5.5% in May

The unemployment rate jumped to 5.5 percent in May — the biggest monthly rise since 1986 — as nervous employers cut 49,000 jobs.

Overall, the economy has shed 324,000 jobs this year, the worst start to a year since 2002, when the nation was still struggling with the aftereffects of a recession.

The 5.5 percent rate is relatively moderate judged by historical standards. Yet, there was no question that employers last month sharply cut jobs with total job losses this year in:

  • Professional and businesses services - 39,000
  • Construction - 34,000
  • Retailing - 27,000
  • Manufacturing - 26,000

Part of that business and professional services decline came from a 30,000 cut in temporary jobs, bringing losses in that sector to 106,000 so far this year.

Those losses swamped gains elsewhere this month, including in:

  • Education
  • Health
  • Government
  • Leisure and Hospitality

Job losses in both March and April turned out to be larger than the government previously reported. Employers now have cut payrolls for five straight months.

Employers won’t want to increase hiring until they feel more sure that an economic recovery has strong legs.

Unemployment Soars to 5.5%

Jobless Rate Jumped 5.5% in May

Hispanic Workers Have Greater Risk of Dying on the Job

Hispanic workers die at higher rates than other laborers, with 1 in 3 of these deaths occurring in the construction industry, a government study reported Thursday. Factors may include:
  • Holding more high risk jobs than other racial groups
  • Language and literacy barriers
  • Poor training and supervision

The leading causes in recent years have been falls and highway-related accidents.

Hispanics Dying on Job at Higher Rates

Adults With ADHD Are Less Productive Workers

Adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) do about one month's less work each year than people who don't have this condition, a new 10-country study from the World Health Organization (WHO) demonstrates.

And only a few of these days are spent out sick.

Workplace programs to screen employees for ADHD and provide treatment could be a cost-effective way to improve productivity, especially since just a fraction of individuals are the condition were getting treatment.

To evaluate the prevalence of ADHD among adults and its consequences in the workplace, the researchers surveyed 7,075 18- to 44-year-olds who were paid workers or self-employed as part of the WHO World Mental Health Survey Initiative. The survey included workers in Belgium, Colombia, France, Germany, Italy, Lebanon, Mexico, the Netherlands, Spain and the US.

Overall, the researchers found, 3.5 percent of individuals surveyed met diagnostic criteria for ADHD. Males were much more likely to have the disorder, while ADHD was less common among professionals.

ADHD manifests itself somewhat differently among adults than children. Individuals with ADHD can be very lively, very hyperactive, but some don't appear hyperactive but are unable to stay focused and to concentrate on one job at one time.

One way to help workers with ADHD might be to allow them to concentrate on a single task per day, rather than requiring them to do several things at once.


Those With ADHD Do 1 Month's Less Work A Year

Who Do Employees Trust?

Most employees have more faith in their own bosses than top management, a new study shows.

  • 75% of more than 7,500 workers surveyed world-wide say they trust their manager

  • 60% trust their organization's senior management

The disparity is even greater among employees in the U.S., Canada and Mexico, with:

  • 75% trusting their manager

  • 53% trusting senior management

Source: BlessingWhite, a Princeton, N.J.-based consulting firm.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Smartest Cities in the U.S.


Sperling's Best places ranked the 200 largest metropolitan areas on the percentage of population 25 and over with a bachelor's degree. If you are interested in living in a community with more degreed residents, you might consider one of these top 10 smartest cities:

  1. Boulder, CO

  2. Bethesda, MD

  3. Ann Arbor, MI

  4. Cambridge, MA

  5. San Francisco, CA

  6. Durham, NC

  7. Fort Collins-Loveland, CO

  8. Washington, DC

  9. Bridgeport, Stamford, Norwalk, CT

  10. San José, Sunnyvale, Santa Clara, CA
Smartest Cities in U.S.

Online Networking Sites Can Help Your Job Search




If you're looking for a new job but don't belong to an online social network, you could be hurting your chances of success. A recent survey of 115 human-resources professionals by Jobvite Inc., a provider of recruitment technology in San Francisco, found that:


  • 78% use sites like LinkedIn, Facebook and Jobster for recruiting.

  • Of those, 16% say that more than half the candidates they consider for jobs are identified through social-networking sites.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Is The American Dream Attainable

  • Slightly less than three-quarters of U.S. workers say the American dream is unattainable, according to a new survey with 755 respondents.
  • Seventy-seven percent also say the nation's political system doesn't represent them on workplace issues such as health care, retirement, fuel prices and the economy.
  • Women feel even less represented than men, with 82% of female workers feeling unrepresented compared to 73% of male workers, reports the Marlin Company, a workplace-communications firm in Wallingford, Conn.

Monday, June 2, 2008

Should Paid Family Leave Be A Federal Law?

Paid family leave is a hot workplace issue. Up until last month, California and Washington State were the only states with any type of family leave legislation on the books. New Jersey passed a paid leave bill in late May. New Jersey and Washington’s programs take effect in 2009.

Most employers don’t provide any type of paid leave to take care of a new baby or an ailing parent. A study by the Society of Human Resource Management found that only one-third of companies offered paid family leave.

The Family and Medical Leave Act requires employers to let workers take up to 12 weeks off without pay. In most cases workers are guaranteed to still have a job when they return. But many employees are hard-pressed to take off so much time without pay.

The lack of paid leave is unusual among the world’s industrialized nations. Other nations without paid family leave include Liberia, Papua New Guinea and Swaziland.

The U.S. system generally is structured around the old model of Mom staying home with the kids and Dad being the breadwinner. The reality today is that 70% of families have both parents working.

There are movements in a handful of other states, including New York, Massachusetts and Oregon, to implement paid leave, but many advocates believe time off with pay should be mandated at the federal level. Two bills now circulating in Congress would mandate eight to 12 weeks of paid leave.

One bipartisan bill sponsored by Sens. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) and Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), calls for eight weeks of paid family leave within a one-year period. Benefits would be paid out on a tiered system depending on salary. The program, which would not affect companies with 50 employees or fewer, would be funded by employee, employer and the federal government.

A second bill in the House would mandate 12 weeks of paid leave. The legislation also includes a tiered wage system and would be funded by a new trust fund. Employers and employees would pay into the fund equally through payroll deductions, similar to unemployment benefits.

But the business community hasn’t exactly embraced these type of mandates with open arms, and Stark expects a battle to pass the legislation. Some employers see the mandate as a potential threat that would raise the cost of doing business, so compnaies would end up lowering wages to compensate. Others say it cuts down on flexibility and creativity.
“Employers didn’t step up on Medicare or Social Security. We made them do it and now it’s part of the system,” he notes.

In California, the paid leave program piggybacks on the state’s disability program and is 100 percent funded by the employees themselves at an annual average cost of about $47 depending on salary. Californians who take advantage of the program get 55 percent of their pay while on family leave.
No matter what the ultimate structure, calls for paid leave are likely to intensify, especially with the graying of the population.

Paid Family Leave Becomes Hot Workplace Issue

Traits Employers Look for in Hiring Employees

What skills do company chiefs consider vital to their organizations? For 88% of 1,150 CEOs surveyed recently, the answer is a tie between:
  • The ability to quickly adjust to internal and external changes
  • Expertise in leading and developing others.

Also highly valued are:

  • Collaboration skills
  • Creativity and innovativeness
  • Proficiency in anticipating and managing risk

Source: PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, an accounting firm headquartered in New York.