Advance copies of this statement are made available to the press under lock-up conditions with the explicit understanding that the data are embargoed until 8:30 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time. Statement of Katharine G. Abraham Commissioner Bureau of Labor Statistics Friday, July 6, 2001 Total nonfarm payroll employment fell by 114,000 in June, the second substantial employment decline in 3 months. Job losses continued in manufacturing and several related industries. The unemployment rate was little changed at 4.5 percent, five-tenths of a percentage point higher than the average for 2000. In June, job losses in manufacturing continued to be steep (totaling 113,000) and widespread. Factory employment has fallen by 347,000 over the past 3 months and by 785,000 since last July. The largest employment declines over the month continued to be in electrical equipment (-31,000) and industrial machinery (-22,000). Other sizable declines occurred in furniture, primary metals, fabricated metals, textiles, apparel, paper, printing and publishing, and rubber and miscellaneous plastics. The factory workweek edged down in June by 0.1 hour to 40.7 hours, while factory overtime edged up 0.1 hour to 4.0 hours. The weakness in manufacturing was felt in several related industries. Wholesale trade lost 15,000 jobs, with cutbacks in both durable and nondurable goods distribution. Similarly, the number of transportation jobs fell by 12,000, in part reflecting cutbacks in both air and ground shipments. In construction, a strong first quarter likely absorbed some of the hiring that normally takes place in the spring. As a result, construction employment was down 50,000 in the second quarter on a seasonally adjusted basis, including a small drop in June. Services employment was flat in June and, for the first time in more than 4 decades, the industry failed to add jobs over the quarter. Help supply services employment fell in June for the ninth consecutive month; during that time the industry has lost a total of 379,000 jobs. Other services industries that lost jobs in June included miscellaneous business services (which includes telemarketing and convention arranging), hotels and motels (which includes campgrounds and RV parks), and amusement and recreation services. Services did provide a few bright spots in this month’s report. Health services continued its strong growth trend, while engineering and management services and computer services picked up their pace of job growth. Retail trade and state and local government also continued to add jobs. Turning to some of the measures obtained from the survey of households, the unemployment rate was little changed in June at 4.5 percent. The unemployment rate for the second quarter of the year also was 4.5 percent, somewhat higher than the rate for the first quarter (4.2 percent), which in turn was slightly higher than the rate for all of 2000 (4.0 percent). The employment-population ratio--the share of the 16-and- over population that holds jobs--continued its gradual decline, having fallen by 1.1 percentage points from its peak in April 2000 to 63.7 percent in June 2001. The number of part-time workers who would prefer full-time work rose to 3.6 million, an increase of nearly half a million over the last 3 months. In conclusion, the job market continued to deteriorate in June. Factory employment again fell sharply, and the weakness in manufacturing likely dampened employment in transportation, wholesale trade, and help supply. Cutbacks in business and vacation travel contributed to employment declines in hotels, amusements and recreation, and air transportation. The June unemployment rate of 4.5 percent was relatively low by historical standards, but still half a percentage point higher than the average rate for 2000.