but let me add..I just got back to Fl from a month in California..two states with the highest unemployment..it is January..a very cold winter up north..this is High season for us..in a high tourist area..the place is a ghost town..usually crowded with tourists right now..it is scarey empty..hotels?? ..empty, restaurants?? empty..the roads are more quiet than I have ever seen this time of year...and I am right on the Beach..condo's that rent out ..empty parking lots..a hotel three buildings down from me..one that Obama has stayed at several times when visitng our state..parking lots empty...stores here ..so many shut down now..and parking lots empty.
who is kidding who here?????????
all new hotels planned to be built for 3 years ..all jobs shut down!
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
This is a society in deep, deep trouble and the fixes currently in the works are in no way adequate to the enormous challenges we’re facing. For example, an end to the mantra of monthly job losses would undoubtedly be welcomed.
But even if the economy manages to create a few hundred thousand new jobs a month, it would do little to haul us from the unemployment pit dug for us by the Great Recession. We need to create more than 10 million new jobs just to get us back to where we were when the recession began in December 2007.Op-Ed Columnist
An Uneasy Feeling
By BOB HERBERT
January 4, 2010
Please read the full article at:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/05/opinion/05herbert.htm... xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x7398354Silicon Valley's Worst Office Glut in 5 Years Means Real-Estate Bloodbath
By Dan Levy
Jan. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Silicon Valley is beset by the biggest office property glut since the dot-com bust, leaving the U.S. technology hub with empty high-rises and office parks that make it impossible for landlords to sustain average rents.
More than 43 million square feet (4 million square meters) -- the equivalent of 15 Empire State Buildings -- stood vacant at the end of the third quarter, the most in almost five years, according to CB Richard Ellis Group Inc. San Jose, Sunnyvale and Palo Alto have 11 empty office buildings with about 3 million square feet of the best quality space.
“There is a bubble bursting in much the same way as the residential market burst,” said Jon Haveman, principal at Beacon Economics, a consulting firm in San Rafael, California. “None of those towers will fill up anytime soon.”
Unemployment in the San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara metro area that includes Silicon Valley was 11.8 percent in November, down from the August record of 12.1 percent, according to California’s Employment Development Department. Applied Materials Inc. and Sun Microsystems Inc. in Santa Clara and Adobe Systems Inc. in San Jose announced more than 5,000 job cuts since October amid falling sales of computer chips, software and equipment.
Commercial property foreclosures will at least double in 2010 and job growth won’t return for two years after that, held back by U.S. consumers who are saving more and “getting back in line with sustainable spending habits,” Haveman said.
Domino Effect
Bloated inventory and tight lending standards will curtail office construction in pockets around California for “the next several years,” said Jack Kyser, founding economist of the Kyser Center for Economic Research at the Los Angeles Economic Development Corp.
MORE...
BLOOMBERG:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=a7p...