"By Bob Willis and Alex Tanzi
Jan. 23 (Bloomberg) -- What’s shaping up to be the longest and deepest U.S. recession in at least a quarter century may swell the number of Americans collecting jobless benefits by half this year.
As the economic slump approaches the depths of the contraction in the early 1980s, the 4.6 million workers currently receiving unemployment insurance checks may increase to as many as 7 million by the end of 2009, economists said.
“There is no structural impediment to reaching the peaks in unemployment we saw in the early 1980s,” said Robert Dye, a senior economist at PNC Financial Services Group Inc. in Pittsburgh. “It’s a matter of the amount of fear( THIS IS THE KEY ) in corporate boardrooms as companies position themselves defensively( LAYING OFF WORKERS PROACTIVELY ).”
The CHART OF THE DAY shows continuing jobless claims as a percent of total non-farm payrolls. At 3.4 percent, the latest reading (red circle) is well short of the 5.2 percent peak (green circle) reached in October 1982, toward the end of the recession to which the current downturn draws the most comparisons. With 135.5 million workers now on payrolls, another 2.4 million people would need to join the ranks of those receiving benefits to make today’s figures comparable to those from 26 years ago.
The recession that began in December 2007 has so far cost 2.6 million jobs. The jobless rate will rise to 8.4 percent by the end of this year from 7.2 percent at the end of 2008, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed this month by Bloomberg News. Unemployment rose to 10.8 percent at the end of the 1982 downturn."
We're not there yet.
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