No, it’s not your imagination.?WSJ?reported this week that white collar jobs, including legal jobs, are taking longer to land.??
What’s going on now with the economy?
- It’s complicated. Over 2 million jobs have been added to the US economy over the last year, but “more people who are out of work are having a hard time getting back in.”
- 7+ million people have been looking for jobs in the US, 1.6 million have been looking for 6+ months (as of November per Labor Department).
- People looking for 6+ months is up >50% since the end of 2022.
- On average it takes 6 months to find a job, a month longer than early 2023.
- WSJ says “largely in high-paying white-collar jobs, including in tech, law and media, where businesses grew fast when the economy reopened from the pandemic but now have less need for new hires.”
- Specifically, “[j]ob postings on Indeed for software development, data science and marketing roles were each at least 20% below prepandemic levels late last year. Government figures show that the hiring rate in the information industry is 30% lower than just before the pandemic, while finance hiring is down by 28%.”
- Who is hit hardest? Office jobs, “where bosses are aiming to be leaner and in some cases replacing workers with AI.”
- Hiring has been “resilient” in mining, manufacturing and transportation.
- Interestingly, “two industries alone, healthcare and government work, have been responsible for more than half of overall job creation over the past 12 months.”
- WSJ also says hospitality is still looking for “hands-on services work.”?
Grim stat: “Year-over-year wage growth has fallen to 4%, down from about 6% at the height of the early 2020s hiring spree. That’s a sign that many employers don’t have to jostle so hard to attract workers.”?