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Laid-Off USA

by mona_moolah   |   3 Comments

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Press Briefing by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, 2/6/2009 THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary "And let me -- I just want to go through for everybody a few of the numbers that we all saw this morning, if I can. In January, as you well know, the economy lost 598,000 jobs. With revisions from the past year, we lost 3 million jobs in this economy. We've lost, as I mentioned a second ago, since the beginning of this recession, which is dated to December of 2007, the economy has lost 3.6 million jobs. That is the biggest 13-month change in employment since 1939, which is the first year these statistics were started. In the last three months alone, this economy has lost almost half, almost 1.8 million of the 3.6 million jobs that have been lost over the 13-month course of this recession. And if you look at these statistics, the rate of acceleration denotes quite clearly that our economy is getting more sick, that the job market is getting worse, and it is accelerating quickly. Let me give you a few numbers behind those numbers. As I said, the last month the economy lost 598,000 jobs. That is the equivalent of losing every job in the state of Maine. In the past two months, the economy lost 1.2 million jobs. That's basically losing every job in Pittsburgh or in Cleveland. In the past three months, the economy has lost 1.8 million jobs, as I said. That's the equivalent of losing every job in Connecticut or South Carolina. And in the past four months, the economy has lost 2.2 million jobs, which is basically losing every job in the state of Louisiana." http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/PressBriefingbyPressSecretaryRobertGibbs2/6/2009/

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TechCrunch Layoff Tracker

See this at: techcrunch.com| Added on 02/07/09

October 2008 will be remembered as the time in which the credit crunch came to a head not only for the economy as a whole but for the tech community in particular.

Highlights: Startups have begun preparing themselves for a bleak and uncertain economic future by cutting costs and focusing on efficiency. This has been achieved most obviously through layoffs, which can reduce burn rates quickly and dramatically for web companies that require little physical...

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* Total Layoffs Since February 6, 2008: 418 * Total Employees: 288,223 Broadcom January 30, 2009 Worldwide 200 3% NEC January 30, 2009 Wordwide 20,000 7% Zazzle January 30, 2009 Redwood City, CA 40 15% Freescale January 30, 2009 Worldwide 2,400 10% Hitachi January 30, 2009 Worldwide 7,000

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Employers Slash Nearly...

See this at: huffingtonpost.com| Added on 02/07/09

The nation lost nearly 600,000 jobs last month, the worst showing in a third of a century, as a vicious cycle of cutbacks by consumers forced ever more layoffs by beleaguered employers.

Highlights: The unemployment rate catapulted to 7.6 percent, the highest in 16 years, and seems headed for double digits. Some 3.6 million jobs have disappeared so far in a deepening recession, which is shaping up as the biggest job killer in the post-World War II period and is raising pressure on...

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In other January figures: Factories slashed 207,000 jobs. That was the largest one-month drop since October 1982, partly reflecting heavy losses at plants making autos and related parts. Construction companies cut 111,000 jobs, professional and business services 121,000, retailers 45,000 and leisure and hospitality companies 28,000. There were gains for education and health services, as well as in government jobs, but those were swamped by the losses elsewhere. The average time it took for an unemployed person to find any job full or part time rose to 19.8 weeks in January, compared with 17.5 weeks a year earlier. And the number of "long-term" unemployed those out of work for 27 weeks or more climbed to 2.6 million from 1.4 million a year earlier. The recession is likely to turn out to be the longest since the 1930s. The two record holders since then downturns in the mid-1970s and early 1980s each lasted 16 months. This recession, which would reach that milestone in April, probably won't end until September, Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com, and other analysts said.

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Microsoft layoffs:...

See this at: blogs.computerworld....| Added on 01/24/09

Overlooked in the Microsoft announcement about its layoffs of 5,000 people over the next 18 months is this startling revelation: The company's revenue decline is due, in large part, to the growth in the sales of netbooks. In a statement, Microsoft... See more more

Highlights: It means that people are forgoing higher-priced laptops, and instead buying netbooks --- and many of those netbooks are powered by Linux. So Microsoft loses out not only on sales of Windows, but also sales of Microsoft Office as well. Estimates are that 30% of all netbooks ship with Linux....

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Report: Starbucks may...

See this at: marketwatch.com| Added on 01/24/09

According to a story in the Seattle Times citing a local investment firm, Starbucks could lay off as many as 1,000 employees, including headquarters workers, district managers and field employees.

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Starbucks has struggled to thrive with mounting job losses, home foreclosures, and stock market losses sapping consumer spending. The coffee retailer over the past year has closed stores, refashioned its menu, cut costs and taken other steps to rejuvenate its business. Starbucks also seeks shareholder approval to reprice employee stock options, many of which are worthless at current prices. Starbucks shares are down 5% so far this year, and down 52% over the past 12 months.

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