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  • 相约北美 / 移民留学 / Latest real good news from cnn.com: Job cuts soar in June Announcements by U.S. firms jump to more than 7 times year-ago pace
    本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Job cuts soar in June
    Announcements by U.S. firms jump to more than 7 times year-ago pace
    July 5, 2001: 3:05 p.m. ET
    NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Job-cut announcements by U.S. companies soared in June, according to an industry survey released Thursday, as corporations continue to shed jobs in an effort to stay afloat in hard economic times.

    U.S. companies announced 124,852 job cuts in June, compared with a paltry 17,241 in June 2000 更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
    • Good news from Canada: Worker demand falls in June (thestar.com)
      本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Worker demand falls in June
      Stats Can report says downward drop in want ads continues
      OTTAWA (CP) - The demand for workers
      continued to fall in June, extending a trend
      which began in November, a Statistics
      Canada survey indicates.

      The agency's help-wanted index, which
      measures the number of help-wanted ads in
      22 newspapers in 20 major metropolitan
      areas across the country, fell 1.8 per cent in
      June after slipping 2.4 per cent in May.

      A rising index suggests employers are
      seeking workers, a falling index that they need fewer workers.

      How the latest indicator translates into jobs gained or lost will be known
      tomorrow when Statistics Canada releases employment-unemployment
      figures for June. The unemployment rate was 7.0 per cent in May.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
      • Latest good news from Canada: Jobless rate increase expected (Globe and Mail)
        本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛POSTED AT 2:53 PM EDT Thursday, July 05

        Jobless rate increase expected


        Globe and Mail Update and Reuters
        News Agency

        Canada's jobless rate is likely to inch
        up in June for the first time in three
        months, analysts said on Thursday,
        and this could be a major factor when
        the Bank of Canada decides its next
        interest-rate move later this month.

        In the U.S., economists expect a slight
        increase in unemployment figures
        despite a quarter-point interest rate cut
        last month by the Federal Reserve
        Board.

        The U.S. and Canada will release
        June's employment numbers jobs
        Friday. The jobs report may have an
        impact on what Canada's central bank
        will do when it announces its stance on interest rates on July 17, which in turn could
        determine the direction the nation's consumer confidence heads this summer.

        In the first quarter of 2001, Canada experienced stronger-than-expected growth thanks to
        buoyant consumer spending in the face of sluggish economic performance.

        Analysts polled by Reuters were divided on whether the Bank of Canada will follow suit
        with the U.S. Federal Reserve Board and cut rates by a relatively minor 25 basis points, or
        give the economy a little more kick with a more substantial rate cut.

        Mark Chandler, senior economist at Goldman Sachs, said employment growth recently has
        been running at less than a third of the pace seen over the last three years.

        "Consumption has held up very well in the first quarter, and there's still a little bit of residual
        strength there. But, the consumer can't continue to do well unless there's underlying labor
        and income growth," he said.

        "As a result, unless employment turns around, I think the bank should be thinking about
        keeping its foot on the [credit-easing] accelerator."

        The Bank of Canada has lowered interest rates by 1.25 basis points to 4.75 per cent so far
        this year, running at half the pace of the U.S. Federal Reserve in its rate-chopping program,
        in a series of pre-emptive strikes to keep the economy from skidding into recession.

        Statistics Canada will release the employment report at 7 a.m. EDT on Friday, while the
        U.S. report will be released prior to the stock markets open.

        The analysts polled expect the Canadian unemployment rate to inch up 0.1 per cent in June
        to 7.1 per cent. The jobless rate has held steady at 7.0 per cent since March.

        In the U.S., analysts believe the unemployment rate will rise 0.01 per cent to 4.5 per cent
        from last month's 4.4 per cent. Non-farm payrolls are expected to drop $50,000 (U.S.),
        while hourly earnings increases are expected to remain steady at 0.3 per cent, same as last
        month.

        On average, economists expect 3,400 new jobs in June, down from an increase of 10,000
        in May. Expectations for June range from a decline of 5,000 jobs to an increase of 10,300
        jobs.

        Canada's economy has been healthier than that of the United States during the first half of
        the year, and some economists believe the Bank of Canada won't be too concerned with a
        slight uptick on the jobless front.

        "For the bank, it means that the economy is growing below its potential growth rate," said
        Sal Guatieri, senior economist at Bank of Montreal. "But given that the bank is
        forward-looking, and expecting growth to rebound in the second half of this year and into
        next year, it probably won't be too fussed by the soft employment growth.

        "In that light, there's probably little need to cut interest rates further."

        With a majority of Canada's manufacturing sector heavily geared toward sales to the United
        States, that sector will likely have lost more jobs in June as the slowdown in the United
        States was much more bleak than the domestic one.

        But the services industry, including construction and retail, is expected to have stayed strong
        in June.

        Analysts were concerned with figures in Canada's help-wanted index, released on
        Thursday, saying they could be a sign of where the economy is headed.

        The index, which measures companies' intentions to hire new workers, fell by 1.8 per cent
        in June to a level of 161 from 164 in May, Statistics Canada said. The downward trend,
        began in November 2000, but the unemployment rate has largely been steady.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net