Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Gradual Improvement Expected for August Hiring

8/7/2009 By Theresa Minton-Eversole



Layoffs continue to permeate the labor market, but more companies in the manufacturing and service sectors are hiring compared with the first few months of 2009, according to the Society for Human Resource Management’s (SHRM) Leading Indicators of National Employment (LINE) Report survey for August 2009.

Hiring expectations in August will lag from those of 2008. Though hiring is down in August 2009 compared with the same time in 2008, more companies in the manufacturing and service sectors will add jobs rather than conduct layoffs. In fact, August 2008 marks the highest level of hiring in the manufacturing sector since October 2008. In the service sector in August, the hiring rate will surpass the layoff rate for the fourth consecutive month.

This news builds on some recent evidence that the job market is gradually improving, albeit very slowly.

“Though year-over-year increases in the employment expectation index have not been positive since November 2007 and remain down in August, this is the second month in a row when more employers in both the manufacturing and service sectors expect to add jobs rather than conduct layoffs,” noted Jennifer Schramm, manager, SHRM workforce trends and forecasting.

Wages and benefits packages for new workers, however, continue to decline. New-hire compensation rose at the slowest rate in July 2009 in five years in the manufacturing and service sectors.

Employment Expectations

Manufacturing

Service


Employment expectations are at five-year lows for August in both manufacturing and service sectors.

-11.5

-2.8

Recruiting Difficulty


Recruiting difficulty in both sectors in July 2009 is down compared with a year ago.

-5.5

-29.7

New-Hire Compensation


The rate of increase for wages and benefits packages in July 2009 has fallen compared with a year ago in both sectors.

-0.7

-8.2

Source: SHRM Leading Indicators of National Employment (LINE), www.shrm.org/line.





The LINE Report examines four key areas: employers’ hiring expectations, new-hire compensation, difficulty in recruiting top-level talent and job vacancies. It is based on a monthly survey of private-sector human resource professionals at more than 500 manufacturing- and 500 service-sector companies. Together, these two sectors employ more than 90 percent of the nation’s private-sector workers. The SHRM LINE indices are not seasonally adjusted, however, so users are encouraged to take seasonality into consideration by comparing the LINE indices for the current month with the comparable LINE indices for the same month one year earlier.

Employment Expectations, Recruiting Difficulty

The LINE Report’s employment expectations index has tracked in lockstep with national economic patterns noted by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) since December 2007, when the nonprofit National Bureau of Economic Research said the recession began. The last time the year-over-year change in this index was positive was November 2007. That more employers in the manufacturing and service sectors will add jobs rather than conduct layoffs in August 2009 will not change that fact.

In the manufacturing sector, a net total of 11.0 percent of respondents reported they will add jobs in August 2009. In the service sector, a net total of 16.9 percent of companies will add jobs in August.

LINE’s recruiting difficulty index measures how difficult it is for firms to recruit candidates to fill the positions of greatest strategic importance to their companies.

“Recruiting difficulty continues to hover at record lows,” said Schramm. “For the first time in five years in July [2009] and for the fifth consecutive month this year, LINE recorded single-digit response levels for those reporting increased difficulty with recruiting.”

The low response totals can likely be attributed to fewer HR professionals engaging in recruiting coupled with an increased number of people looking for work. Under such circumstances, HR professionals can afford to be selective.

In the manufacturing sector, a net of 13.1 percent of companies reported less difficulty with recruiting in July 2009 (2.8 percent had more difficulty, 15.9 percent had less). This is the second year in a row in July that more manufacturers reported an easier time recruiting in July than those who reported having more difficulty.

In the service sector, a net of 19.9 percent of companies had less difficulty recruiting in July 2009 (3.0 percent had more difficulty, 22.9 percent had less). With millions of people seeking work and fewer opportunities that exist, this trend in the LINE recruiting difficulty index is not likely to reverse in the near future.

New-Hire Compensation

With hiring down during the recession and a large pool of job seekers in the market, some companies are reducing the wages and benefits they are offering new hires in an effort to control costs.

In the manufacturing sector, a net total of 0.3 percent of respondents said they would decrease new-hire compensation in July 2009 (3.1 percent increased, 3.4 percent decreased). That’s the lowest July response total in five years for manufacturers reporting increases to new-hire compensation.

In the service sector, the trend of reducing new-hire salaries and benefits was slightly more pronounced. A net total of 1.6 percent of companies reduced wages and benefits packages for new hires in July 2009 (2.4 percent increased, 4.0 percent decreased).

“Many companies are continuing to reduce the wages and benefits they are offering new hires,” Schramm said. “With so many job seekers out looking, employers are finding it much easier to shrink these new-hire pay packages in their efforts to control costs and still find a ready pool of qualified job candidates willing to work at these reduced rates.”

Exempt, Nonexempt Job Vacancies

LINE Report data cover exempt vacancies, or primarily salaried positions, and nonexempt vacancies, mostly hourly wage positions.

In the manufacturing sector, a net total of 3.0 percent of respondents reported increases in exempt vacancies in July 2009 (15.3 percent reported increases, 12.3 percent reported decreases). Among the major job sectors, manufacturing had the second-lowest number of job openings in May 2009, trailing only the construction industry, according to the BLS.

In the service sector, a net total of 10.3 percent of respondents reported declines in exempt vacancies in July 2009 (12.0 percent reported increases, 22.3 percent reported decreases). The tight hiring conditions detailed in LINE match other data. In May 2009, there were 2.6 million job openings in the U.S.—a decline of 1.5 million from May 2008, according to the BLS.

In contrast, nonexempt employment typically decreases by a greater percentage than exempt employment during economic downturns and increases by a larger percentage during economic expansions. Nonexempt vacancy levels did not change much in July 2009 from the same time in 2008 in either sector.

A net total of 6.9 percent of manufacturing respondents reported that nonexempt vacancies decreased in July 2009 (17.2 percent increased, 10.3 percent decreased). July’s data matches that of July 2008, when manufacturing respondents also reported a slight increase in nonexempt vacancies.

For nonexempt service positions, a net total of 6.1 percent reported increased vacancies in July 2009 (18.2 percent increased, 12.1 percent decreased).

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