According to the BMO, almost half of Canadian post-secondary students surveyed — 46 per cent — said they see themselves starting a business after graduation. Continue reading
Approximately 6.99 million students will graduate this year from Chinese colleges and universities, a new all-time high. This reflects China’s attempt to upgrade its workforce by promoting higher education. But the labor market is sending some rather disappointing messages. Against the backdrop of the troubled world economy and faltering domestic demand, companies in China are … Continue reading
Two years after graduating from college with an accounting degree, Amanda Coombes expected to be working full-time in her field. Instead, she’s living with her mom and working at McDonald’s. These days, in hard-hit Ontario, a job is a job. “It’s hard for us,” Coombes, 23, said of the challenges she and her fellow graduates … Continue reading
Over 100,000 public sector jobs — in banks, Railways, Food Corporation of India, Indian Ordinance Factories, Bharat Coking Coal and many other PSUs — are up for grabs Continue reading
Thirty-nine states and the District of Columbia used $1.3 billion from the TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) Emergency Fund to place more than 260,000 low-income adults and youth in temporary jobs in the private and public sectors during the Great Recession. Now, from the Economic Mobility Corporation (EMC), there’s new evidence that these subsidized … Continue reading
Lawrence County’s largest employer, International Paper announced this morning (Wednesday) that it plans to permanently close its Courtland paper mill. The plant is Lawrence County’s largest employer. Here is what International Paper in Memphis had to say about the decision: ”International Paper (NYSE: IP) today announced plans to permanently close its Courtland, Ala. Mill, a … Continue reading
After a period of relative calm during the 1990s, rapid changes in American families began anew during the 2000s, a new analysis suggests. Young people delayed marriage longer than ever before, permanent singlehood increased, and divorce and remarriage continued to rise during the first decade of the century. But the most troubling finding, researchers say, … Continue reading
Employment in France’s non-farm sector decreased modestly in the second quarter after staying steady in the March quarter, data released by statistical office Insee showed Wednesday. The number of employees in the market sector, excluding the farm division, decreased 0.2 percent sequentially to around 15.93 million in the second quarter, after staying broadly unchanged in … Continue reading
The ax has been falling at HP faster than anticipated. In May 2012, the company said it would cut 27,000 positions globally, 9,000 of them in the U.S. By that September, it revised that number upward to 29,000. Originally, HP said the layoffs would occur over two years as part of a “multi-year productivity initiative” … Continue reading
Furniture Brands International Inc., which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Monday, plans to lay off 1,451 workers in Mississippi, nearly one-fourth of its U.S. workforce. The layoffs will come from the St. Louis-based company’s Lane Furniture division, which has manufacturing plants in Belden and Siltillo and distribution centers in Verona and Wren, according to the … Continue reading
Information and communication technologies (ICTs) are transforming the world of work, creating new job opportunities and making labor markets more innovative, inclusive, and global. Three trends are driving this shift: greater connectivity, the ability to telecommute and outsource work, and globalization of skills. According to a new World Bank policy note, “Connecting to Work: How … Continue reading
Chinese employers forecast modest hiring trends in the fourth quarter of 2013, according to the newly released Employment Outlook Survey from ManpowerGroup. For the final quarter of the year, 16 percent of employers expect to increase their staffing levels, while only 2 percent plan to decrease the number of workers. And 46 percent of Chinese … Continue reading
Italy is haemorrhaging manufacturing jobs. Since 2007, 55,000 manufacturing firms have folded, taking more than half a million jobs with them. Weak demand at home and high labour costs are not the only factors prompting Italian companies to move to eastern Europe. Carlo Carnevale Maffe, professor of business strategy at Milan’s Bocconi University, blames a … Continue reading
Once touted as an economic miracle, faltering India cannot provide jobs for millions of university graduates. Meanwhile, employers complain they don’t have the skills anyway Continue reading
The number of layoffs and firings recently hit a record low level, according to government data released Tuesday morning. There were 1.51 million layoffs and discharges in July, down from 1.6 million in June and 1.79 million when the recession started at the end of 2007. The data go back to 2000. Those findings are … Continue reading