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Slowdown or shutdown? Whatever’s behind it, October’s private-sector job growth was the smallest since April. ADP and its partner Moody Analytics say only 130,000 jobs were created during the month. They also revised the initiate estimate of September’s new jobs to 145,000, a drop of 21,000.
Delayed until November 8 because of the government shutdown, that report is closely watched by economists and the Federal doorbells for sale Reserve, which is using it as as indicator of the overall health of the U.S. economy. Following today’s ADP National Employment Report, which came in about 20,000 jobs below expectations, economists now predict the Labor Department’s report will also show about 130,000 new jobs during the month.
Commenting on the report, Mark Zandi, chief economist with Moody’s, said, “The government shutdown and debt limit brinksmanship hurt the already softening job market in October. Average monthly growth has fallen below 150,000. Any further weakening would signal rising unemployment. The weaker job growth is evident doorbells for sale across most industries and company sizes.”
Typically, small business — employers with fewer than 50 workers — has driven much of the job growth, often accounting for half, or nearly so, of the total new monthly jobs. In October, ADP says it was large employers — those with more than 1000 workers — that did the heavy lifting, adding 79,000 new workers to the nation’s payrolls.
Sadly, the user system that has powered our website since 1998 no longer plays nicely doorbells for sale with today's technology. As a result, we have had to build a new, separate user system to power our new website projects.
Unfortunately, that means we have to ask our users to sign up for a second account in order to access some of our new services, like posting a comment on our new website. (You can still use your existing account to access our older services, like the ERE Network.) Very soon, though, there will be only one user system that powers everything.
John was a newspaper reporter and editor until his geek gene lead him to launch his first website in 1994. Never a recruiter, he instead built online employment sites and sold advertising services to recruiters and employers. As VP of one large media operation , his employment revenue alone approached $2.5 million. Besides writing for ERE, John consults with digital content operations, doorbells for sale focusing on the advertising side. And when he's not doing either, he can be found hiking in the California mountains or competing in canine agility events .
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