The economy lost 663,000 jobs in March, bringing losses since the slump began to about 5.1 million, the worst in the postwar era, Labor Department figures showed in Washington. The 8.5 percent jobless rate was consistent with the forecasts of 79 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The Institute of Supply Management’s non-manufacturing index unexpectedly dropped.
“We could continue to see a few more months of really bad employment numbers before it starts to ease,” said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts. Behravesh projected the jobless rate will peak between 10 percent and 10.5 percent in early 2010. “We aren’t there yet, but we are getting closer to a bottom,” he said.
When are we going to stop calling this thing a recession and start calling it what it really is?
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