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For job seekers in 2010, the economy will likely be their friend. With a 5.7% GDP growth in the fourth quarter of 2009, following the 2.2% increase in the third quarter, this recovery is already stronger than the last two.

The U.S. labor market is on the cusp of substantial, sustained positive job growth. This net jobs creation is coming only two quarters after the end of our deep recession. That's just one-third of the 21 months it took for job growth to resume after the 2001 recession. Given current trending, the U.S economy will likely add more than 100,000 jobs in February. And the picture looks even better come springtime.

The government's monthly job report on Friday showed that the disastrous labor situation that plagued the nation's economy going into 2009 is now on the mend. The unemployment rate has peaked and now fallen in January to 9.7%.

An encouraging sign from the current report was the addition of 52,000 temporary workers. Temporary worker hiring often signals that employers are starting to gear up again.

Employers brought many "reduced hour" workers back to full-time work status in January. That concrete move is seen as a precursor to hiring additional workers as recovery takes root.

Even cautious economists like Mark Vitner of Wells Fargo remarked on Friday that despite his opinion that the January falling unemployment rate "showed an exaggerated sense of improvement in labor market," he continued, "But there is improvement. I don't want to take that away."

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2010

Tags: business, economy, hope

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