San Diego Union-Tribune

HIRING PLUNGED IN DECEMBER AS JOB OPENINGS TICKED UP

Restaurant, hotel, entertainm­ent sectors particular­ly hard hit

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R RUGABER Rugaber writes for The Associated Press.

U.S. employers cut back sharply on hiring in December, particular­ly industries slammed by the pandemic such as restaurant­s and hotels, as virus infections soared and government­s responded with tighter restrictio­ns.

The number of available jobs rose slightly and layoffs fell, according to the Labor Department’s Tuesday report, known as the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or JOLTS. The report provides more granular detail about the job market than the government’s monthly employment figures.

Employers cut hiring 6.6 percent in December, to 5.5 million, the report said. Roughly threequart­ers of the decline occurred in a category that includes restaurant­s, bars, hotels, casinos, concert halls and other entertainl­oss

ment venues. Warehousin­g and shipping firms also slashed hiring, the report found.

On Friday, the government said that employers added a meager 49,000 jobs in January, signaling a potential stall in hiring and for the economy. That followed a

of 227,000 jobs in December. The unemployme­nt rate fell to 6.3 percent last month, in part because many of those out of work gave up on their job searches and were no longer technicall­y counted as unemployed.

Tuesday’s report provides overall hiring and job posting figures, while Friday’s figure is a net gain after all hiring, layoffs and quits are added up.

Job openings rose just 1.1 percent in December to 6.6 million, the JOLTS report found. That leaves the number of job postings significan­tly below the pre-pandemic level of 7 million last February.

Other measures of available jobs suggest that they have fully recovered from the pandemic but are growing much more slowly. Website Indeed.com said last week that postings on its site are now 0.7 percent above where they were in February 2020, before the pandemic intensifie­d. But that’s much slower growth than a year ago, when postings were growing at a 9 percent annual rate.

And not all sectors have recovered, Indeed said. Job postings in hotels and tourism are still 35 percent below pre-pandemic levels, while restaurant jobs are down 13 percent and arts and entertainm­ent nearly 17 percent.

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA AP ?? Employers cut hiring 6.6 percent in December, to 5.5 million, the JOLTS report said.
CHARLES KRUPA AP Employers cut hiring 6.6 percent in December, to 5.5 million, the JOLTS report said.

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