It’s the “little-commented-on” silver lining of the Great Recession — employees who held onto their jobs are doing pretty well.  While the ranks of unemployed workers who have been out of work for 27 weeks or more is a staggering 45% — since World War II, it has never before been above 26% — real average hourly pay has risen nearly 5 percent since the start of the recession in December 2007.  Nominal wages (the numbers people see in their paychecks} have risen throughout the slump, as companies have passed along some of their productivity gains to their remaining workers.  And inflation, of course, has been almost non-existent.  Now, if only the still-employed would stop looking over their shoulders at their less-fortunate neighbors and go on a spending spree, maybe we could kick things into gear…  The New York Times Aug. 11, 2010

 

The National Retail Federation is forecasting a 0.5% reduction in U.S. retail sales this year, the first year-over-year decline in fourteen years.  Bloomberg News National Retail Federation Jan. 27, 2009

 

The eleventh straight month of job losses brought the year-to-date total to 1.9 million and sent the unemployment rate up to 6.7 percent.  There is even more bad news in the source article, if you can bring yourself to look at it.  The New York Times Dec. 5, 2008

© 2012 Pitch and Ship Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha