U.S. unemployment numbers came in just before Labor Day, and they are grim: 9.7 percent and rising. Small comfort that they were expected to be worse. The stock market rose on the news that August’s decline in non-farm employment was a mere 216,000 compared to 276,000 jobs lost in July. It’s always fascinating that bad news can be taken as good news because it wasn’t as bad as anticipated.
IBM and Procter & Gamble’s 21st Century Workplaces
U.S. unemployment numbers came in just before Labor Day, and they are grim: 9.7 percent and rising. Small comfort that they were expected to be worse. The stock market rose on the news that August’s decline in non-farm employment was a mere 216,000 compared to 276,000 jobs lost in July. It’s always fascinating that bad […]
September 08, 2009