[Accessibility Information]
Welcome Current Issue Index How to Subscribe Archives
Monthly Labor Review Online

Related BLS programs | Related articles

ABSTRACT

June 1994, Vol. 117, No. 6

The 1990-91 recession: how bad was the labor market?

Jennifer M. Gardner
Economist, Division of Labor Force Statistics, Bureau of Labor Statistics


The most recent recession was milder than earlier postwar contractions, but many labor market measures did not improve until well after the official end of the downturn. This article focuses on demographic and occupational employment and unemployment data to examine several unique factors of the 1990-91 recession: how the labor market continued to deteriorate long after other economic indicators began to improve, how employment declines were more widespread across the major occupational and industry groups, and how a much smaller share of the unemployed who lost jobs in the recession expected to be rehired.

ArrowRead excerpt   ArrowDownload full text in PDF (641K)


Related BLS programs
Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey
National Current Employment Statistics
 
Related Monthly Labor Review articles
Women and jobs in recoveries: 1970-93. July 1994.
 
Job losses among Hispanics in the recent recession. June 1994.
 
Long-term unemployment in recent recessions. June 1994.
 
Industry employment and the 1990-91 recession. July 1993.
 
Women and jobs in recessions: 1969-92. July 1993.
 
Recession swells count of displaced workers. June 1993.
 
Atlantic and Pacific coasts' labor market hit hard in early 1990's. February 1993.

Within Monthly Labor Review Online:
Welcome | Current Issue | Index | Subscribe | Archives

Exit Monthly Labor Review Online:
BLS Home | Publications & Research Papers