Demand for temp jobs on the rise
Chicago Tribune
CHICAGO — After losing their jobs, Greg and Gloria Christ drove through office parks, jotting down the names of potential employers. Eventually, they tried a more direct route to getting work: a temporary-help agency.
“At this point in time, I think even if there was something that was temporary it could become full time later on,” said Gloria Christ of Palatine, Ill., a former customer service professional with nearly two decades of managerial experience. The Christs wound up seeking the help of Banner Personnel Service in nearby Schaumburg, Ill.
As the economy continues to struggle, more unemployed workers with years of professional experience are willing to take jobs for which they are overqualified, experts say.
In the Chicago area, for example, temporary agencies report being flooded — and not just with recent graduates or retirees looking for part-time gigs. People who should be at the pinnacle of their careers also are flocking to their doors, said Janet Sloan, president of Seville Staffing in Chicago.
“What I have seen is the increase in prime-aged individuals who are actively seeking just about anything,” she said. “There is definitely an increase in qualified candidates.”
It’s hard to say how many people are overqualified for their jobs. Those workers aren’t calculated in the Department of Labor’s underemployment rate, which spiked to 13.9 percent in January, said Heidi Shierholz, an economist with the labor-oriented Economic Policy Institute in Washington.
Only the unemployed are included with people who have recently given up their job searches and those who would prefer full-time work to their part-time jobs.
Although not measured in federal data, over-qualification is a form of underemployment and very much on the rise, Shierholz said.
“When you have productive, hardworking people who can’t maximize their potential, the productivity the economy would have gotten from them is gone,” she said. “It disappeared. You can never get it back.”
Among those taking the temp agency route is Damon Karras of Chicago, a former manager at an advertising marketing firm with six years of sales experience and a biology degree who has been out of work since October.
Months of searching for a position in such fields as the garment industry and pharmaceutical sales turned up nothing. So a few weeks ago, he found himself at a staffing agency taking a typing test, which is required to land a temporary clerical job.
“I’ve got to do whatever I can,” said Karras. “My rent alone is 1,500 bucks.”
That sentiment has been reverberating in temporary agencies, officials say.
“People are more than willing to try new occupations, much more willing than they were even a year ago,” said Anne Edmunds, regional director of Manpower for the Chicago area.
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