Jump In Productivity Puts Job Creation In Doubt
MARTIN CRUTSINGER
WASHINGTON (AP) Companies across the economy are finding ways to do more with fewer workers, dimming hopes that hiring will take off anytime soon. Employers became leaner and more efficient in the third quarter. Wages, meantime, remain flat or falling. The result is that productivity output per hour of work jumped at the fastest pace in six years. The good news for companies, though, is bad news for the jobless. As long as companies can get their workers to produce more, they have little reason to hire at least until consumer spending picks up. And the squeeze on incomes could depress consumer spending, putting the economic recovery at risk. Productivity rose at an annual rate of 9.5 percent in the July-September quarter, the Labor Department said Thursday. That was much better than the 6.4 percent gain economists had expected. Unit labor costs fell at a 5.2 percent rate. The productivity rise, which followed a 6.9 percent surge in the second quarter, was the fastest advance since a 9.7 percent increase in the third quarter of 2003.- Loading Comments...
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