Thursday, August 1, 2013

More about the Dinar

There has been a lot more buzz about the Dinar recently. Apparently they are still planing to do some sort of revaluing of the currency. There are people forming groups and watching this stuff. Don't forget if these stories are even half true then there will be some money to be made out there. It is hard to say that is why I pay attention to what I hear and report it to my readers . Once I have done this you can make your own decisions based on the information gathered. My site is the only one I know of that actually tells you how to make money online and also follows different stories pertaining to money at the same time. Don't forget to subscribe and follow us. Thanks. Here is the link to the stories I was talking about.

Retail market still below pre- recession levels!?

Well everything else seems to be normalizing except retail. They are still below the level they were at before the recession. So what is going on? The feds are saying that consumer spending is back to normal so where are all the figures then. This seems very fishy to me. Here are the statistics from market watch. Don't forget to subscribe or follow us. Thanks

Details on retail still not pretty


Retailers have boosted employment by 650,000 since the recession ended, making the industry the fourth fastest growing segment of the economy.
Yet in a sign of lingering weakness in the U.S., the retail industry is still a half-million jobs short of its high-water mark of 15.6 million workers. Scarred by the Great Recession, Americans just aren’t spending as much.
Nor is retail a lucrative line of work. The average salary is just $16.63 an hour — about 30% less than the nationwide average. And the average employee works less than 32 hours a week, partly reflecting the volatility of consumer-shopping patterns. Retailers don’t need the same number of workers each month. 
 

One of the most stable jobs ever Health care!

One of the jobs that seems to be showing an enormous amount of promise is health care. They are growing and growing. I hope this does not become another bubble type situation. Either way it is moving up an up with no signs of slowing down. The population does not seem to be slowing down at all so I am sure that no matter what happens this industry will be fine. Here is the health care statistics from market watch. Don't forget to subscribe for good info. Thanks.

Doctor, doctor, give me the news

The medical profession didn’t slow down much even during the worst of the 2007-2009 downturn. The health-care industry generated 1.02 million jobs in the past four years and remains one of the fastest growing parts of the economy. It now employs 14.57 million people.
Or how about this. The health-care industry has added jobs every year since the government first began to keep track in 1990. The average pay is also pretty darn good: $26.53 an hour ($55,000 a year).
Clearly a large slice of the hiring reflects the aging of the Baby Boomers and the need for health providers to cater to their needs. The advent of “Obamacare,” the president’s signature health reform law, is also likely to boost employment.
The high cost of health care, however, is also a drag on the economy. Consumers have to fork over a greater share of their income on doctors, hospitals and drug prescriptions and have less to spend on other goods and services. 
 

What jobs seem to be holding there own?

Which jobs in this new economy seem to be doing better or holding there own? This is also a good question and there is another good answer from the people at market watch. Check them out and see the statistics it will probably surprise you. It might not but some of the rates were surprising to me that these people are getting paid. Another interesting point is the temp jobs part. Any way enjoy and don't forget to subscribe. Thanks.

 

Tempered view of professional hiring

The segment of the economy that has added the most jobs since the recession ended in June 2009 is classified as “professional and business services.” About 2.12 million jobs have been created for architects, engineers, scientists, managers, computer geeks, and yes, journalists.
This is normally high-paying work with an average hourly wage of $28.41 an hour, which translates into $1,136 a week. But there is a wide range. Some occupations such as computer design pay more than $40 an hour and others like upholstery cleaning pay less than $20 an hour.
Unfortunately, almost half of the new professional jobs since mid-2009 were created at temporary-hiring agencies. The work doesn’t always lead to a full-time job and these positions pay far less: $15.74 an hour. Many people clearly like temp jobs, but others have no choice.
The percentage of temps in the private-sector workforce has nearly matched an all-time high of 2.4% set at the end of the Internet boom in early 2000. 
 

How many Jobs are in the new economy?









 Just how many jobs have we gained in this new economy? That is a good question. Well the people at market watch have an answer for all of that. These are the statistics from them. It does look like we are coming back up and the economy is improving so time will tell the rest I guess. I hope that we can continue on these trends. Don't forget to subscribe or follow us. Thanks.



WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — The United States has added an average of 200,000 jobs a month through the first half of 2013 and the pace of hiring probably didn’t slow very much in July, economists say.
The U.S. likely created a net 175,000 jobs last month and that could push the unemployment rate down to 7.5%, according to economists polled by MarketWatch. The July employment report will be issued Friday morning.
The odds of an even bigger increase seemed to grow Wednesday after payroll processor ADP reported a better-than-expected 200,000 gain in private-sector jobs.
In the bigger picture, the U.S. has now regained more than four-fifths of the 8.8 million jobs lost in the private sector during the last recession.
The bad news is the private sector won’t match its all-time employment high until early 2014 at the current pace of hiring — nearly five years after the recovery began. And the economy is still missing millions of jobs that would have been created if the U.S. had experienced a more normal rebound.
In what fields are most of the jobs in the U.S. being created? And what do they pay? Click to find out.
— Jeffry Bartash