US job openings dropped to their lowest levels since 2021, indicating an easing of labor demand in some sectors but a job market that nevertheless remains tight and is propping up wages. Job vacancies ...
Jena McGregor is a Forbes senior editor who covers the future of work. Dec 28, 2021, 07:00am EST Updated Apr 21, 2022, 08:17am EDT A 'Help Wanted' sign is posted beside Coronavirus safety guidelines ...
The National Association for Law Placement (NALP) has released its latest data and the news is good: the "strongest ever" job market for law grads. "Driven by extraordinary demand for talent at the ...
The Conference Board's consumer confidence index for October rose more than 11% to a reading of 138, its biggest single-month acceleration since March 2021. Job openings slid to 7.44 million in ...
New ABA data shows which law schools had the highest percentage of recent grads land full-time legal jobs So-called T-14 schools made up half of the top 20 Some lower-cost public schools also made the ...
A Chevron station in Snoqualmie Pass, Wash., on Jan. 4. Gas-station staff are among the lowest-paid workers in the country, but have seen much-higher-than-average wage gains this year. (David ...
The Labor Department's initial monthly jobs reports and Wall Street's estimates in 2021 weren't as reliable as usual. The U.S. economy added 4.9 million jobs in the first 10 months of the year, ...
The COVID-19 pandemic set off nearly unprecedented churn in the U.S. labor market. Widespread job losses in the early months of the pandemic gave way to tight labor markets in 2021, driven in part by ...
The U.S. added more than 6.7 million jobs in 2021. That’s nearly 500,000 more than the 6.25 million projected near the start of the year by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. The country is ...
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