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Strategies & Market Trends : Galapagos Islands -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: AugustWest who wrote (31235)3/7/2003 8:47:29 AM
From: Peach  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 57110
 
<font color=blue>----NAZWAG 3/7/03 ----
(previous close 1302)

1258 AW
1288 Norma



To: AugustWest who wrote (31235)3/7/2003 8:54:05 AM
From: AugustWest  Respond to of 57110
 
Unemployment Rate Rises to 5.8 Percent

WASHINGTON, Mar 07, 2003 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- The nation's unemployment
rate increased to 5.8 percent in February and companies across the economy
slashed 308,000 jobs - the steepest one-month slide since labor markets hit a
slump in the wake of the 2001 terrorist attacks.

The overall civilian jobless edged up a tenth of a percentage point from the 5.7
percent figure recorded in January, the Labor Department reported Friday.

Economists had predicted the modest rise, but did not expect the hemorrhaging of
jobs that wiped out large hiring gains the month before. Analysts actually had
forecast job gains of 20,000.

Instead, employers last month shed the most jobs since November 2001, when they
purged 327,000 from their payrolls following the attacks on the World Trade
Center and Pentagon.

Nearly 2 million jobs have been lost since hiring peaked in March 2001.

In February alone, 8.5 million people were unemployed, a 2.8 million increase
since the fall of 2000. The number of long-term jobless tripled during this
period. About 1.9 million people have been jobless for 27 weeks or more,
comprising 22 percent of total unemployment.

Businesses have been wary of making long-term hiring and spending commitments as
the economy struggled toward recovery. But any improvements in the jobs market
now appear to be quashed as the nation inches toward war with Iraq.

It was that same climate of uncertainty that dampened business confidence in the
wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks - and which soured job prospects for the
unemployed.

Job losses in February were widespread. The nation's factories were hit
particularly hard last month, which was not unexpected. Manufacturing employment
has been obliterated since April 1998 and some 2.5 million jobs have been lost -
most of them since the recession started in March 2001.

A sharp in construction employment wiped out gains in January. Since the
recession began, construction jobs have been cut by 3.8 percent, substantially
less than in other industries.

Employment in services fell by 86,000 last month, the largest monthly job loss
since the fall of 2001. In that category, stores, restaurants and bars accounted
for most of the decline. Hiring in amusement and recreation services, and at
hotels and lodging places, all fell considerably short of their normal February
levels.


By LEIGH STROPE
AP Labor Writer

Copyright 2003 Associated Press, All rights reserved

-0-

APO Priority=u
APO Category=1311

KEYWORD: WASHINGTON
SUBJECT CODE: 1311

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