Dow
     -89.23
12801.23
-0.69%
|
     -9.31
1342.64
-0.69%
|
     -108.90
14000.51
-0.77%
|
     -23.35
2903.88
-0.80%
|
     -1.03
53.27
-1.90%
|
     +1.09
116.27
+0.95%
|
     +0.01
2.01
+0.42%
June 9, 2010 1:06 PM

More Employees Say "I Quit" as Economy Improves

By
CBSNews
(AP)  One sign of better economic times is when more people start finding jobs. Another is when they feel confident enough to quit them.

More people quit their jobs in the past three months than were laid off - a sharp reversal after 15 straight months in which layoffs exceeded voluntary departures. The trend suggests the job market is finally thawing.

Some of the quitters are leaving for new jobs. Others have no firm offers. But their newfound confidence about landing work is itself evidence of more hiring and a strengthening economy.

"There is a century's worth of evidence that bears out this view that quits rise and layoffs fall as the job market improves," said Steven Davis, an economist at the University of Chicago.

Still, the number of people quitting their jobs is nowhere near what it was before the recession. Economists expect the improvement in the job market to be fitful, rather than consistent. In May, for example, private employers added only 41,000 net jobs after adding 218,000 in April.

Yet the long-term trend points to an improving job market. The economy has created a net 982,000 jobs this year after a recession that wiped out more than 8 million of them.

The government said Tuesday that the number of people quitting rose in April to nearly 2 million. That was the most in more than a year and an increase of nearly 12 percent since January. That compares with 1.75 million people who were laid off in April, the fewest since January 2007, before the recession began.

During the depths of the recession, workers were hesitant to quit - and not only because jobs were scarce. Even if they found a new job, some feared that accepting it would leave them vulnerable to a layoff. At many companies, layoffs follow a simple formula: Last hired, first fired.

Many clung to their jobs out of fear, said David Adams, vice president of training at Adecco, a national staffing agency. When Adecco tried to recruit workers to fill open positions, it frequently ran into the same obstacle: Few workers felt like betting on a new job that might soon disappear.

Not so much any more. Adecco is seeing more employed workers seeking interviews, rather than laid off workers searching for a lifeline.

"The hangover is kind of over," Adams said. "It's really starting to move toward a market where the employee can have a lot more confidence making a move."

That's why Katie Charland just quit her job at a parenting magazine in Phoenix to take a position with a nonprofit that supplies children's educational programs.

Charland, 27, says the position is a dream job. Still, it carries a cost: She's abandoning seniority at her old job. But she thinks the economy is expanding enough that her company will be able to attract state and corporate funding.

"I don't see leaving my current job to pursue this as a risk," Charland says. "I do feel like the economy is getting better, and there's more opportunity out there."

Such optimism was rare in 2008 and 2009, when employers cut more than 8 million jobs, sending the unemployment rate to a 26-year high of 10.1 percent. The number of people who quit fell 40 percent to 1.72 million in September 2009. That was the fewest since the government began tracking the data in 2000. It was down from nearly 2.9 million in December 2007, when the recession began.

Studies have shown that worker morale fell during the recession. Productivity rose as companies squeezed more work out of their employees. That points to a reason quits may keep rising: Overworked employees could jump at the chance to switch jobs as new opportunities arise.

"There is going to be a mass exodus of the top performers as the economy starts to turn around," predicts Razor Suleman, a consultant who helps companies retain their best workers.

About 25 percent of companies' top performers said they plan to leave their current job within a year, according to a survey published in the May edition of the Harvard Business Review. By contrast, in 2006, just 10 percent planned to leave their jobs within a year. The survey questioned 20,000 workers who were identified by their employers as "high potential."

Companies retained those workers during the recession but heaped more work on them, said Jean Martin, the study's co-author and executive director of the Corporate Executive Board's Corporate Leadership Council in Washington. At the same time, employers cut back on awards and bonuses, she said.

Now, top performers at some companies are heading for the exits as hiring picks up. It means companies will feel more pressure to retain them.

"These rising stars know what they're worth," Martin said. "They feel somewhat neglected."

Phil Edelstein can attest to that. He spent two years on his first job at an advertising agency gaining more responsibility but no pay raises.

Edelstein, 25, worked for an agency in Philadelphia that was stretching its budget as clients cut back their spending. After researching clients' brand names and marketing strategies, he moved on to directing study projects.

Bosses kept promising a pay raise commensurate with his workload. It never came.

"There's this intense frustration that comes with that, because you basically feel like you have no control over how much money you're making and how much work you do," he said.

Edelstein hung tight through 2009 as the economy shed jobs. But this year he began sending out resumes to other ad agencies. Then a prospective client called. The CEO of a Colorado-based tea maker needed a marketing director. Edelstein didn't need long to say yes.

"It felt good, because I was initiating the change," he said.

More people are now taking a leap that few dared just a few months ago: Quitting without a new job waiting. The improving economy has given them confidence.

Robert Dixon is among them. He was consulting with companies doing business in China, helping them establish supply chains with factories there. But he tired of spending weeks at a time away from his wife in Massachusetts. So in May he quit - without a backup plan.

"Somebody the other day said to me I was the first person they'd met who quit a good-paying job without another one to go to," Dixon said. "I know there are other companies out there. I just need to find them."


AP
Add a Comment See all 22 Comments
by babooph June 9, 2010 7:31 PM EDT
The US propaganda system raved that fat bankers must keep their massive pay ,or they may leave[even with 50% tax rates overseas for them]-no word of US workers wanting to go overseas for higher wages 5 week vacations & full free health care,20 sick days,10 vacation days....
Reply to this comment
by ladyang June 9, 2010 6:28 PM EDT
I'm one of those that's leaving my employer and moving cross country!
Reply to this comment
by generey June 9, 2010 7:39 PM EDT
You go girl...good luck!
by jgg000101 June 9, 2010 4:57 PM EDT
so if unemployment "unexpectedly" spikes it's because things are so fabulous people are quitting their jobs?
Reply to this comment
by generey June 9, 2010 7:39 PM EDT
Can't get it if you quit.
by m0u5y June 9, 2010 4:01 PM EDT
How about you guys start ******** at the idiots who think they can quit a job just because they feel these jobs are below them. That's not going to help this economy. As long as you have people who refuse to do anything but whatever job they think seems fit for THEM, then we will always have a screwed up economy. Maybe everyone should just be assigned a job and made to do it because this freedoms crap isn't working. Must be nice to live in a country where you're free to be greedy, free to not work and still make money, free to not have a job... what a great system.
Reply to this comment
by theywerestrongandgood June 9, 2010 1:59 PM EDT
I do not know a single person who has quit his or her job. I do know jobless, even homeless people. Some local families have lost everything: their jobs, their homes, then their children to foster care. In several cases, it is because of a recent influx of aliens from Mexico and Guatemala.

Please, someone care about these United States citizens who are broken by the alien invasion. Not everyone is capable of earning an engineering or marketing degree. Our least powerful workers, especially men, are being reft of their livelihoods, yet we have people in our streets chanting for alien invaders' rights.
Reply to this comment
by lovethiscountry June 9, 2010 1:52 PM EDT
Yes, the numbers sound good and certainly happy for those that can choose what they want to do.

Working for a small company who manufacturers Capital Equipment we took a 10% pay cut a year ago to keep the doors open, then 10% layoff, and then another 5% pay cut. Business is picking up but will it continue? We were given the 5% back but will probably not get the other 10% back until this Fall (if orders continue coming in). We just hired a new engineer to replace two layed off -- as needed to get the new orders out the door.

The other employees that had been layed off are still looking for work, so I doubt if anyone is going to quit their job here.

We have not only received less pay but when we should have been getting raises we were not and yes more work. But we were working and very thankful for that.

It seems those quiting without a job is taking a big risk but they obviously have the security to do so where most are not in that position.
Reply to this comment
by Myopinion046 June 9, 2010 1:16 PM EDT
Good. Give me that job.
Reply to this comment
by rile1con June 9, 2010 12:12 PM EDT
I didn't realize the recession was over and the economy is improving. Who knew?
Reply to this comment
by larry0304 June 9, 2010 12:55 PM EDT
CBS News knew. They have been saying the same thing for months now. Guess they did'nt see the fed chairman the other day talking about a double dip recession. I guess the CBS news mantra is if you keep repeating the same refrain over and over, sooner or later ya end up being right.........
by ianlou June 9, 2010 12:10 PM EDT
During bad times Employers screw Employees.
During good times Employees screw Employers.

Circle of life...
Reply to this comment
by askagain June 9, 2010 4:37 PM EDT
What is an employer suppose to do when business is bad? Some businesses do not have enough cash flow to meet payroll. When orders for goods and services are slow, where is the employer going to get the money to pay wages and salaries, pay required insurance such as workmen's compesation and unemployment insurance, and pay for employee benefits?
by patocc123 June 9, 2010 12:02 PM EDT
I think its more to do with companies and the delegation of responsibilities.

I know my company downsized by about 20% and we deal directly with the automotive and housing industry. The problem is that the remainder of the employees are having to pick up the slack due to being under employed. Obviously for people who were kept the mentality was that it was a needed evil to maintain employment but after a year it can take its toll on some people.
Reply to this comment
See all 22 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook