
"Consumers are just tapped out." Toys R Us expands layaway program Holiday retail sales are expected to increase by 2.8% to $465.6 billion, the NRF also said. While it's a step in the right direction, that growth is far lower than the 5.2% increase retailers experienced last year. With consumers still reluctant to splurge -- even on gifts at the holidays --retailers will be playing it safe, added Robert Brusca, a chief economist at Fact and Opinion Economics. "They're keeping it pretty close to the vest," he said. 0:00 / 10:49 Bill Clinton: How to create jobs now During the 2007 holiday season -- right before the recession began -- retailers hired 720,000 workers. But just one year later, as the recession took hold, holiday hiring hit a 26-year low and only 324,000 temporary workers were hired. Double your salary in the middle of nowhere North Dakota Retailers seem split on bulking up their workforces this year. Last month, Best Buy ( BBY , Fortune 500) announced that it will only be hiring a fraction of the holiday workers that it took on last year and Toys "R" Us said that this year's holiday hiring will be in line with the previous year. Meanwhile, Macy's said it plans to hire even more temporary workers this holiday season. Although a majority of the retail hiring will take place in the weeks ahead, a portion of those positions have already been filled, the NRF said. Since August, the retail industry has added nearly 100,000 jobs.