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Unemployed Americans pick up job applications from a prospective employer at the National Careers Fair in Los Angeles on February 7, 2010.  US job creation ground to a halt in January as winter storms gripped broad swaths of the country, while the unemployment rate fell to a 22-month low of 9.0 percent. The economy added 36,000 nonfarm jobs, the Labor Department said, far fewer than the 148,000 expected by most analysts and down from 103,000 in December. For the second month in a row the unemployment rate fell 0.4 percentage point, from 9.4 percent in December. The drop was unexpected after an average analyst estimate of a rise to 9.5 percent.                       AFP PHOTO/Mark RALSTON
Unemployed Americans pick up job applications from a prospective employer at the National Careers Fair in Los Angeles on February 7, 2010. US job creation ground to a halt in January as winter storms gripped broad swaths of the country, while the unemployment rate fell to a 22-month low of 9.0 percent. The economy added 36,000 nonfarm jobs, the Labor Department said, far fewer than the 148,000 expected by most analysts and down from 103,000 in December. For the second month in a row the unemployment rate fell 0.4 percentage point, from 9.4 percent in December. The drop was unexpected after an average analyst estimate of a rise to 9.5 percent. AFP PHOTO/Mark RALSTON
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Getting your player ready...

WASHINGTON — The U.S. labor force has been split into two groups: the relieved and the desperate.

If you have a job, you can exhale; you’re less likely to lose it than at any point in at least 14 years.

If you’re unemployed? Good luck. Finding a job remains a struggle 20 months after the recession technically ended. Employers won’t likely step up hiring until they feel more confident about the economy.

A result is that people who are unemployed are staying so for longer periods. Of the 13.9 million Americans the government says were unemployed last month, about 1.8 million had been without work for at least 99 weeks — essentially two years. That’s nearly double the number in January 2010.

Yet the deep job cuts of the recession have long since ended. In January, companies announced plans to trim fewer than 39,000 jobs, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas. That was 46 percent fewer than a year earlier. More strikingly, it was the fewest number of planned layoffs in January since Challenger began keeping track in 1993. For all of 2010, planned layoffs hit a 13-year low.

Eventually, consumer spending will rise high enough that companies will need to accelerate hiring to keep up with demand. In the meantime, a fading fear of layoffs is likely helping the economy: It’s encouraging consumers who have jobs to spend more.

“The fact you know that the paycheck is going to be coming in now and for the foreseeable future gives you permission to do some extra spending,” says John Challenger, chief executive of Challenger.

Retailers, in particular, have stopped shedding workers. After the best holiday shopping season in four years, stores cut fewer than 5,800 jobs last month. That’s only about one-third the number of a year earlier.

Courtney Miller-Rao, 28, is feeling more secure about her job than at any time since she began working a decade ago. She’s an auctioneer, selling cars for an auto-salvage company near Waterbury, Conn.

“We’re growing immensely; we’re opening a new branch, selling more cars,” she says. “I don’t feel like I have to work 10 to 14 hours a day to keep my job.”

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