NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- On Friday, the Labor Department gave the bad news: The nation's unemployment rate hit a 26-year high in October, while nonfarm payrolls were slashed by a slightly larger-than-expected 190,000.
While the street consensus had forecast a more subtle rise to 9.9% from September's 9.8%, many public and private sector economists anticipated the rate to top 10% before year end. Despite a smattering of recent positive-sounding economic figures highlighting a recovery, jobless numbers are the proverbial "lagging indicator" and many realize that the job market would get worse before it gets better. Still, the headline -- unemployment rate at 10.2% -- is utterly disappointing, though not all-together surprising to our readers. A vast majority, about 82%, of readers of TheStreet who took a poll posted before the release of the labor report, believed that the unemployment rate would top 10% during the month. Looking ahead shows our users to be even more pessimistic about the future of the unemployment rate. A separate poll -- posted immediately after the 10.2% rate was announced -- showed that more than 16% of users anticipate the rate to stay about the threshold for more than 2 years, with almost 27% of users saying the expect the rate to stay above 10% for between 12 and 24 months. The greatest proportion of respondents -- almost 34% -- see the rate staying above 10% for between 6 to 12 months. A mere 3% see the rate falling below 10% within 2 months, followed by the 2% who see it coming back to single digits after only one month.- Loading Comments...
- Loading Comments...
Recent Comments
Featured Photo Galleries
-
Sony Bets Big on Fallen 'King'
The Wall Street Journal.
-
Lehman Whistle-Blower's Fate: Fired
The Wall Street Journal.
-
Hedge Funds Fail When ‘Rock Stars’ Are in Charge: Matthew Lynn
BusinessWeek Online
-
Payback Time: Avalanche of Maturing Junk Bonds Looms for Markets
New York Times
-
Deutsche Bank’s Epley Said to Leave for Nomura Job (Update1)
BusinessWeek Online
-
EU urges faster cut of UK deficit
BBC
-
So far so good as Shell is given a shaking
Latest Business News from Times Online
-
Curb your spending, Brussels tells Gordon Brown
Latest Business News from Times Online
-
Toyota says tests cast doubts on story of runaway Prius in California
Washington Post
-
With Medicaid Cuts, Doctors and Patients Drop Out
New York Times
| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,658.78 | 1,155.22 | 2,372.06 | 36.83 |
Oil *
79.30
|
|
UP
16.63
|
UP
4.71
|
UP
9.85
|
DOWN
0.21
|
10 Yr
3.68%
SPDR Gold
109.86
|
|
+0.16%
|
+0.41%
|
+0.42%
|
-0.57%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |
More From TheStreet
Latest HeadlinesBrokerage Partners
Sponsored Links














