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NPR News

Jobs Numbers Paint 'Very Gloomy' Picture For All

Job-seekers line up at a job fair in Los Angeles on Wednesday. The Labor Department reported Friday that there was no job growth in August, the first time in a year. Unemployment remained at 9.1 percent.
Job-seekers line up at a job fair in Los Angeles on Wednesday. The Labor Department reported Friday that there was no job growth in August, the first time in a year. Unemployment remained at 9.1 percent.
(
Reed Saxon
/
AP
)

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President Obama is set to deliver a major speech on jobs next Thursday, and his task will be even more challenging after Friday's monthly government jobs report. The U.S. Labor Department says there was no job growth for the first time in a year, and unemployment was unimproved, staying at 9.1 percent.

NPR's Scott Horsley tells Weekend Edition host Scott Simon some jobs were added, but not enough to make up for other losses.

"Private employers did add some workers to their payrolls — some 17,000 of them across the country, but those gains were completely offset by cutbacks on the government side," he says. "Making matters worse, the already lackluster job gains we thought we'd seen in June and July were revised downward by nearly 60,000 workers."

While the word "recession" is one that comes up, the country is technically not there yet, Horsley says.

"So far, it does not appear the economy's actually shrinking," he says, "but it's certainly not growing in a healthy way, and in the way that most people care about, which is jobs."

The poor jobs numbers also affect people who are working. Horsley says when this many people are unemployed, pay raises are harder to come by. The average hourly earnings for workers and the average number of hours worked both decreased in August, the Labor Department reports.

"So all in all, this was a very gloomy picture for people who would like to see more money in their paycheck, as well as those who just like to see a paycheck after what for many of them has been many months on the unemployment line," he says.

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In his speech, Obama's aides say, the president will present a plan to meaningfully increase job growth over the next 12 to 18 months.

"So that means this is going to be some kind of short-term shot in the arm, and they hope it will be one that actually contains some serious medicine," Horsley says.

All of the details have not been released, but Horsley says the president is likely to call for an extension of the payroll tax cut and more tax incentives for companies that hire new workers. Obama is also expected to talk about increasing funding for public works projects and for training assistance for unemployed workers.

Horsley says the chances of Obama's proposals getting through Congress are "not great." However, there may be certain points of cooperation, including a training program for longtime unemployed workers, which House Republican leader Eric Cantor said Republicans favor.

The president "extended an olive branch" on Friday when he withdrew proposed regulations on smog, Horsley says, "the kind of rule that the GOP likes to say kills jobs."

"So there may be some areas where they can cooperate, but on the whole ... these two parties are very far apart," he says, "and that political polarization is making the economic recovery that much harder."

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