RE: virus: Re:Minimum wage

From: Blunderov (squooker@mweb.co.za)
Date: Tue Oct 28 2003 - 11:07:39 MST

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    [Blunderov]
    Once again this seems germane.
    Best Regards
    <snip>
    Paul McFedries [wordspy@logophilia.com]

    job-loss recovery

    n. A form of economic growth in which the total number of jobs in the
    economy decreases. Also: job loss recovery.

    Example Citations:

    Even the U.S.'s impressive productivity gains have a bit of tarnish.
    Productivity is usually measured as output for every person-hour worked.
    In the U.S., it has been going up, in large part, because companies have
    laid off workers or, at least, not hired new ones.

    About 3.2 million jobs in the U.S. have disappeared since the recession
    began in early 2001. Experts say the U.S. is suffering from a "job-loss
    recovery" not the jobless recovery of the 1990s.

    There is good news, however: employment has perked up in recent weeks.
    -Tom Ford, "Economic problems will greet Martin," The Guelph Mercury,
    October 24, 2003

    About 616,000 jobs have been lost since the beginning of 2002, when
    experts believe the economy began growing again in a so-called jobless
    recovery. One economist said the economy was now trapped in a "job-loss
    recovery."
    -Angela Shah, "June numbers show labor market in 'quicksand'," The
    Dallas Morning News, July 4, 2003

    Backgrounder :

    This term is a play on the phrase jobless recovery (or job-less
    recovery) - economic growth that doesn't create new jobs - which entered
    the language around 1985.

    Earliest Citation:

    Analysts said that as long as output remained well under 3 percent,
    there was little prospect that payrolls would start growing again.

    "Growth of anything less than 3 percent to 4 percent is a jobs
    recession," said James Glassman, senior economist at J.P. Morgan. "So
    far, this is a job-loss recovery."

    Nearly half a million jobs have been lost in the last two months. The
    U.S. government is scheduled to release employment data for April next
    Friday.
    -Kenneth N. Gilpin, "U.S. economy grew slowly in first period," The
    International Herald Tribune, April 26, 2003

    On the Web:

    http://www.wordspy.com/words/job-lossrecovery.asp

    See Also:

    Goldilocks economy
    growth recession
    profitless prosperity
    X-shaped recovery
    </snip>

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