Greater Expectation to Hire Boosts TX Worker Confidence
Confidence among Texas workers strengthened in January, as the state’s Hudson Employment Index (SM) rose 3.9 points to 120.3.
Confidence among Texas workers strengthened in January, as the state’s Hudson Employment Index (SM) rose 3.9 points to 120.3.
Confidence among workers in Atlanta sagged in January, as the city’s Hudson Employment Index (SM) fell 5.5 points to 110.3.
Worker confidence in Philadelphia improved for the third consecutive month in January, as the city’s Hudson Employment Index (SM) rose 1.6 points to 91.6.
The Hudson Employment Index (SM) for San Francisco fell for the second straight month in January, dropping 5.4 points to 94.2.
Workers confidence in Tampa jumped to start the year, as the city’s Hudson Employment Index (SM) climbed seven points to 119.9.
Worker confidence dropped in Washington, DC to start the year, as the city’s Hudson Employment Index (SM) fell 6.1 points to 108.2.
Worker confidence was nearly unchanged in Boston in January, as the city’s Hudson Employment Index (SM) shifted up just 0.3 points to 98.0.
Worker confidence declined in Chicago for the second straight month, as the city’s Hudson Employment Index (SM) dropped 2.2 points to 92.4.
Worker confidence declined in Dallas to start the year, as the city’s Hudson Employment Index (SM) fell three points to 106.1 in January.
Worker confidence waned in Los Angeles in January, as the city’s Hudson Employment Index (SM) fell 1.6 points to 102.3.
The Hudson Employment Index (SM) for Minneapolis-St. Paul jumped 10.2 points to 109.2 in January.
Hudson Employment Index (SM) climbed 2.4 points in January to 90.3.
Small business confidence in the American economy rebounded in January as owners reported substantially fewer cash flow issues in surveys conducted for this month’s Discover® Small Business Watch (SM).
More than three-quarters (76 percent) of U.S. workers report to a Caucasian boss and just one-third (34 percent) state their boss is a woman, according to a new Hudson survey.
The economic confidence of consumers in Chicagoland rose significantly during the fourth quarter of 2006.
The Hudson Employment Index (SM) fell 2.6 points to 102.7 in December, primarily as a result of lowered job satisfaction and increased job loss concerns. The monthly measure lost ground following a nearly four point rise in November.
Worker confidence among accounting and finance professionals fell to a 2006-low in December after hitting a record high the previous month. The group’s Hudson Employment Index SM dropped 11.2 points to 106.0.
After spiking to an all-time high in November, worker confidence among Hispanics fell a dramatic 10.2 points this month, as the Hudson Employment Index SM for Hispanics dropped to 103.5.
Worker confidence among IT professionals decreased in December after hitting a 2006-high last month as the group’s Hudson Employment Index SM fell six points to 109.8
Confidence among workers in the legal sector fell sharply in December as this group’s Hudson Employment Index SM plummeted 10.4 points to 105.8.