Economists surveyed by the Wall Street JournalĀ in August predict that the U.S. economy will lose an average of 27,000 jobs per month over the next twelve months, significantly better than the 70,000 average monthly losses they forecast for July. This is the fifth consecutive survey predicting declining monthly losses. Despite the declining losses, the outlook for the unemployment rate has improved only slightly, from 10 percent to 9.9 percent for December 2009, and from 9.5 percent to 9.4 percent for December 2010.
A better-than-expected employment report for July, where employers cut 247,000 jobs and the jobless rate fell for the first time in 15 months, suggests the worst is over. The unemployment rate is still expected to rise to 9.9% by December, but economists forecast that the economy will shed far fewer jobs over the next 12 months than they had forecast last month.
This month's Wall Street Journal survey of economists was conducted from August 7-11. Each month the WSJ asks economists to estimate the average monthly change in nonfarm payrolls over the next twelve months. That is, the monthly changes the BLS reports each month, for the next twelve months, divided by twelve.











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