Published Friday, October 03, 2008 6:05 AM
WASHINGTON -- There's no need to explain to Al Lubrano how deeply tight credit has wounded the economy.
Lubrano, president of a metal components maker in Lincoln, R.I., said orders from his customers in the automotive, computer, and telecommunications industries had "dropped precipitously" in the past six weeks.
"I'm going to have to lay people off" if the economy doesn't improve, he said.
He's not alone. The government reported Thursday that factory orders posted the biggest drop in two years in August as businesses cut back on purchases of large equipment and consumers spent less on autos, electronics, appliances and other goods.
When manufacturing takes a hit, jobs get pummeled. More people than expected lined up at the unemployment lines last week, according to government data released Thursday, pushing claims for jobless benefits to a seven-year high.
There's more pain to come, predicted Lubrano, if the House doesn't pass a $700 billion plan to buy bad assets from banks and other institutions to shore up the financial industry and eventually thaw frozen lending.
Lubrano met with President Bush on Thursday as part of a group of business representatives who favor the package approved by the Senate on Wednesday night.
"You're going to see jobless rates shoot up like you haven't seen in years" if the package doesn't pass, Lubrano said. His company, Technical Materials Inc., has about 200 employees and is already planning to reduce their hours over the holidays.
The weak economy and the impact of Hurricanes Ike and Gustav caused new claims for unemployment benefits to increase slightly last week to 497,000, the Labor Department said Thursday.
That's the highest number since claims reached 517,000 roughly two weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the department said. It's the second-highest since 1992, according to David Resler, chief economist at Nomura Securities.
The hurricanes, which hit Texas and Louisiana last month, added about 45,000 claims from the two states, the department said.
The hurricanes have led to higher claims for several weeks. As a result, the four-week average of claims, which smooths out fluctuations, jumped to 474,000, up 11,500 from the previous week.
The number of people continuing to receive benefits increased to 3.59 million, up 48,000 and higher than analysts' estimates. That's the highest total in five years.
Jobless claims are at elevated levels, even excluding the hurricanes. Weekly claims have topped 400,000 for 11 straight weeks, a level economists consider a sign of recession. A year ago, claims stood at 324,000.
The figures are likely to get worse, analysts said, because they don't yet include thousands of potential layoffs likely to result from the turmoil on Wall Street.
Last month, investment bank Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy protection, while Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. was bought by Bank of America Corp. Citigroup Inc. purchased Wachovia Corp., and JPMorgan Chase & Co. scooped up Washington Mutual.
"Thousands more layoffs are expected to follow," said Karl Kuykendall, a regional economist at Global Insight, an economic forecasting firm.
Economists predict that a separate Labor Department report Friday on payrolls will reflect further weakness in the labor market. They expect the report to show that the nation's employers cut 100,000 jobs last month. That's on top of 605,000 jobs eliminated in the first eight months of this year.
The report is expected to show that the jobless rate remains at 6.1 percent. The rate jumped above 6 percent for the first time in five years in August.
Meanwhile, the Commerce Department said Thursday that factory orders in August plunged by 4 percent from July's, a much steeper decline than the 2.5 percent drop analysts had expected and the biggest setback since a 4.8 percent plunge in October 2006.
The weakness was led by big declines in orders for aircraft, down 38.1 percent, and autos, which fell by 10.6 percent, the worst performance in nearly six years.
Orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, considered a good barometer of business investment plans, fell 2.4 percent, the biggest setback in this category in 19 months. It's an indication that businesses are slashing their investment plans in the weak economy and that growing credit strains are making it hard for companies to get loans to expand and modernize.
Large manufacturers have started to see their customers pull back "just in the past few weeks," due to difficulties with credit, said Daniel Meckstroth, chief economist at MAPI/Manufacturers Alliance, a research group.
The jobs and manufacturing reports disappointed Wall Street. The Dow dropped 348 points, and the S&P 500 fell 47 points.
Notice about comments:
TheEagle.com is pleased to offer readers the ability to comment on stories. We expect our readers to engage in lively, yet civil discourse. TheEagle.com does not edit user submitted statements and we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted in the comments area. Responsibility for the statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not theeagle.com. If you find a comment that is objectionable, please click "report abuse" and we will review it for possible removal. Please be reminded, however, that in accordance with our Terms of Use and federal law, we are under no obligation to remove any third party comments posted on our website.
Full terms and conditions can be read here.
- Emailed
- Viewed
- Commented
- Colorado County man killed in wreck
- Bush plans A&M visit
- A&M music teacher was 'wonderful'
- A new exercise in motivation
- A&M spells out funding needs
- Surfing shepherd
- Study finds more students lie, cheat and steal
- Bridge work results in flurry of accidents
- Obama White House could be green, high-tech
- Normangee teen among crash dead
- Normangee teen among crash dead
- A new exercise in motivation
- A&M music teacher was 'wonderful'
- Bush plans A&M visit
- NCAA passes on Aggie volleyball team
- Bridge work results in flurry of accidents
- Local economy looking sound
- Photo: Keeping the King alive
- Colorado County man killed in wreck
- Brazos Valley moms look for ways to stretch clothing budgets
- Iola's only bank cites lack of growth in closure (21)
- Sooners hold serve vs. OSU, set up South debate (8)
- Wal-Mart worker dies after shoppers knock him down (7)
- Sherman, Ags feel good going forward (5)
- Surfing shepherd (3)
- A new exercise in motivation (2)
- FDA sets safe level for infant formula contaminant (2)
- COMMENTARY: Protecting regular season key to playoff plans (1)
- OU going to Big 12 title game thanks to BCS (1)
- Deadline is today for some taxpayers (1)
- Jobs
- Cars
- Homes
- Merchandise
|
© 2008 The Bryan College Station Eagle Contact Us | Subscribe/Customer Care | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | FAQ | Corrections | RSS Feeds | E-mail News |


