Money | economy Tough Job Market May Last Through Late 2009 'Slow motion' recession will continue to pare jobs By Jim O'Neill Posted Jul 2, 2008 8:42 AM CDT Copied Lynette Walker, a recruitment assistant with the New York City Department of Buildings, collects resumes from job applicants at a job fair held by the department on Tuesday, June 17, 2008. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan) US jobs are eroding and they're unlikely to rebound until late 2009, reports the New York Times. May’s 5.5% unemployment rate is a point higher than a year ago and the 9.7% underemployed rate is up from 8.3% in May 2007, reports the Labor Department—which tomorrow releases a report expected to show a decline of 60,000 jobs in June. Losses in June would be the sixth consecutive month of decline, causing economists to worry that the US is caught in a “slow motion recession.” “In a normal recession, things kind of collapse and get so weak that you have nowhere to go but up," says one economist. "But we’re not getting the classic two or three negative quarters. Instead, we’re expecting two years of sub-par growth. It’s kind of a chronic rather than an acute pain.” Read These Next A former NFL Pro Bowler has died at age 36. The massive AWS failure exposed a big problem with the internet. A man ended up dead after trying to steal from Spirit Halloween. Backlash for Trump nominee who said he has 'a Nazi streak.' Report an error