hen the national
economy tanks, temporary workers are usually the first to go. Job cutbacks hit quickly
and sharply, and the rebound is typically long in coming. But the current economic
downturn has been different.
Temporary and contingent jobs have been disappearing
again, but for a longer time and at a much slower pace than in previous downturns.
Temporary jobs have been stagnant or declining since at least early 2007, a period
of contraction that analysts say is unprecedented. Yet the total number of lost
jobs to date is still just a fraction of the number cut in previous, shorter setbacks.
The unusual situation has experts in the contingent
staffing industry and company officials scratching their heads. They are trying
to understand the forces at play and determine whether the staffing industry has
managed to engineer a soft landing or if more serious job losses are still to come.
Some of the largest global staffing companies are telling investors the outlook
for temporary staffing is so unsettled that they are unable to predict how well—or
how poorly —they will perform in the next few months.
Part of the uncertainty comes from the continuing disruptions
in the national and global economies and the fact that contingent and temporary
staffing has yet to undergo what many expected would be a steep drop earlier in
the cycle. Indeed, the performance of the U.S. staffing industry has thus far been
a tale of two sectors. Demand for skilled, professional workers in fields like health
care and technology has remained strong even as cutbacks hit the commercial sector,
populated by lower-skilled clerical and manufacturing workers.
"Even in a down economy, some staffing sectors and firms
in some parts of the country continue to fare pretty well," says Richard Wahlquist,
president and CEO of the American Staffing Association in Alexandria, Virginia.
"Generally, the commercial sector has borne the brunt of the downturn. Professional
sectors have, for the most part, held up the best."
Brief stints for pros
The use of professional short-term contingent workers
has been the fastest-growing sector in the contingent and temporary staffing industry
over the past few years. The commercial sector, which once accounted for the bulk
of temporary and contingent jobs in the U.S., has been overtaken by the professional
side, which now accounts for more than half of the overall temporary job count.
Those professional temporary workers are more in demand
partly because they are assigned to more important and integral corporate tasks
and projects, so companies are less likely to immediately let them go. According
to Jon Zion, president of Eastern U.S. operations for Robert Half International,
which specializes in professional staffing, the reluctance to cut professional contingent
workers has become more widespread in the past few years. Corporations were much
more likely during the last recession, in 2001-02, to cancel ongoing projects that
used temporary workers rather than let those projects run their course, Zion says.
"A lot of companies realized that when they stopped,
it impeded their ability to grow when the downturn ended," Zion says. This time
around, companies are choosing to proceed with projects despite the slowing economy.
"They have investments in strategic projects and they are bringing them to conclusion."
The real test will come once the current round of strategic
projects runs out. If the economy remains soft, companies may choose to delay additional
projects that use professional contract workers, which could spell trouble for the
staffing industry. "Companies have seen bad news long enough to think twice about
starting new initiatives that the staffing industry supplies," says Jonas Prising,
president for North America at Manpower Inc., which is based in Milwaukee. "My best
guess is that companies are probably going to slow down their use of professional
skills."
How much slower the professional staffing sector gets
could be determined not just by the state of the economy but also by the availability
of skilled labor, particularly in fields like engineering, technology and health
care. The need to find the right skills to fill critical jobs could continue to
bolster demand for certain types of professional temporary workers even if the economy
worsens.
Tech workers are among those who are most in demand.
During the last recession, which was tied to the end of the technology bubble, contingent
tech workers were among the first to go. Not so this time around.
"In the current downturn, I have found it very interesting
how information technology has prospered," Zion says. "Maybe tomorrow is another
day. But up until now it has been very good."
Staffing firms hold steady
The combined strength in professional staffing and the
gradual decline in overall temporary staffing have proved to be a calming influence
on staffing companies. While there has been belt tightening among staffing companies,
there have not been widespread cutbacks and staffing office closures. Staffing companies
say they are hoping to maintain their office networks so they are ready when the
economy revs up again.
"Nobody is pushing any panic buttons," says Steve Berchem,
American Staffing Association vice president. "I’m not hearing alarm bells going
off."
But he adds, "That isn’t to say there hasn’t been an
impact."
One of the puzzling aspects of the current downturn
is that while the number of lost temporary jobs has been modest, the total still
represents the brunt of overall job losses in the economic slump. Staffing Industry
Analysts, a research and consulting organization, has been closely tracking the
temporary staffing sector and comparing the current situation with earlier economic
downturns.
In a recent report on its findings, the Los Altos, California-based
company noted that the U.S. shed 370,000 temporary jobs in 2001 as a result of the
last economic slump. That total represented 22.7 percent of the total 1.6 million
jobs lost in 2001. By comparison, the U.S. lost 189,000 temporary jobs from January
to July 2008. But the latest staffing cuts represented 40.8 percent of the 463,000
total jobs lost in the U.S., an indication that the temporary sector has been hit
with an even bigger share of overall job losses this time around.