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Related: About this forumNordstrom, JOLTS underscore 'palpable sense of urgency' in jobs market: Morning Brief
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Nordstrom, JOLTS underscore 'palpable sense of urgency' in jobs market: Morning Brief
Javier E. David · Editor focused on markets and the economy
Wed, October 13, 2021, 5:14 AM
This article first appeared in the Morning Brief. Get the Morning Brief sent directly to your inbox every Monday to Friday by 6:30 a.m. ET. Subscribe
Wednesday, October 13, 2021
Employers, especially retailers, may be out of luck this holiday season
Two separate yet self-reinforcing bits of news are illuminating trends that most of us have already known for some time, but are clearly getting worse.
First, for a variety of reasons related to COVID-19 and a stretched economy, the upcoming Thanksgiving/Christmas holiday will be unlike any weve experienced in recent memory. The second point which, if youre a regular reader of the Morning Brief, will come as no surprise bolsters the first: there are way more available jobs than bodies to fill them.
Nordstroms (JWN) announcement on Tuesday that it's looking to hire nearly 30,000 seasonal workers this year dovetailed with Augusts Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS). The monthly series showed that while available job openings retreated from a record above 11 million, more than 10 million people have voluntarily left their jobs (to do only goodness knows what).
The staggering quit rate underscores what veteran Wall Street watcher Chris Rupkey calls fed up workers leaving for greener pastures. But it also undermines the idea that the labor market was restrained by generous COVID-era unemployment benefits, or parents marooned at home with school-aged children who are now going back to in-person classes.
There is an enormous labor shortage in the country right now and it is not just because people are quitting or have child care problems, or cant get to work due to the Delta variant, FWDBONDS Rupkey wrote on Tuesday.
The economy is strong as a bull, that is why there is a tremendous demand for labor. It is no longer necessary for Washington officials to pull out all the stops and throw money at the economy to create jobs. Business is open and ready to hire, they dont need to be incentivized, they need workers badly, the economist added.
{snip}
Nordstrom, JOLTS underscore 'palpable sense of urgency' in jobs market: Morning Brief
Javier E. David · Editor focused on markets and the economy
Wed, October 13, 2021, 5:14 AM
This article first appeared in the Morning Brief. Get the Morning Brief sent directly to your inbox every Monday to Friday by 6:30 a.m. ET. Subscribe
Wednesday, October 13, 2021
Employers, especially retailers, may be out of luck this holiday season
Two separate yet self-reinforcing bits of news are illuminating trends that most of us have already known for some time, but are clearly getting worse.
First, for a variety of reasons related to COVID-19 and a stretched economy, the upcoming Thanksgiving/Christmas holiday will be unlike any weve experienced in recent memory. The second point which, if youre a regular reader of the Morning Brief, will come as no surprise bolsters the first: there are way more available jobs than bodies to fill them.
Nordstroms (JWN) announcement on Tuesday that it's looking to hire nearly 30,000 seasonal workers this year dovetailed with Augusts Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS). The monthly series showed that while available job openings retreated from a record above 11 million, more than 10 million people have voluntarily left their jobs (to do only goodness knows what).
The staggering quit rate underscores what veteran Wall Street watcher Chris Rupkey calls fed up workers leaving for greener pastures. But it also undermines the idea that the labor market was restrained by generous COVID-era unemployment benefits, or parents marooned at home with school-aged children who are now going back to in-person classes.
There is an enormous labor shortage in the country right now and it is not just because people are quitting or have child care problems, or cant get to work due to the Delta variant, FWDBONDS Rupkey wrote on Tuesday.
The economy is strong as a bull, that is why there is a tremendous demand for labor. It is no longer necessary for Washington officials to pull out all the stops and throw money at the economy to create jobs. Business is open and ready to hire, they dont need to be incentivized, they need workers badly, the economist added.
{snip}
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Nordstrom, JOLTS underscore 'palpable sense of urgency' in jobs market: Morning Brief (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Oct 2021
OP
JohnSJ
(92,190 posts)1. What seems to be missing is the reason why there is a shortage of willing workers. Regardless
of the reports that the number of infections is going down, it is still too high, and that 25% of the population, for one reason or another is still hesitant about getting vaccinated, I suspect this is part of the problem.
The previous administration helped plant the seeds for what we are going through now
Ocelot II
(115,693 posts)2. Maybe try paying people more?
Retail jobs are crap, especially around the holidays. Offer reasonable wages to do a crap job and maybe they will get more applicants.