The
Employment Rate In The United States Is Lower Than It Was During The
Last Recession
Did
you know that a smaller percentage of Americans are working today
than when the last recession supposedly ended? But you won't
hear about this on the mainstream news. Instead, the mainstream
media obsesses over the highly politicized and highly manipulated
"unemployment rate". The media is buzzing about how
"163,000 new jobs" were added in July but the unemployment
rate went up to "8.254%".
Sadly, those numbers are quite misleading. According to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, in June 142,415,000 people
had jobs in the United States. In July, that number declined
to 142,220,000.
That means that 195,000 fewer Americans were working in July than in
June. But somehow that works out to "163,000 new jobs" in
July. I am not exactly sure how they get that math to add up.
Perhaps someone out there can explain it to me. Personally, I
find that the "employment rate" gives a much clearer
picture of what is actually going on in the economy. The
employment to population ratio is a measure of the percentage of
working age Americans that actually have jobs. When it goes up
that is good. When it goes down, that is bad. In July,
the employment to population ratio dropped from
58.6 percent to 58.4 percent.
Overall, the percentage of working age Americans that have jobs has
now been under 59 percent for
35 months in a row.
The
following is a chart of the employment to population ratio in the
United States over the past 10 years....
The
gray shaded bar in the chart represents the last recession as defined
by the Federal Reserve. As you can see, the percentage of
working age Americans with a job dropped sharply from nearly 63
percent at the start of 2008 to a little above 59 percent when the
recession ended.
But
the "employment rate" kept on dropping even further.
It
finally bottomed out at 58.2 percent in December of 2009.
Since
that time, it has stayed very steady. It has not fallen below
58 percent and it has not risen back above 59 percent.
This
is very odd, because after ever other recession since World War II
this number has always bounced back strongly.
But
this has not happened this time.
In
essence, it is starting to look like 4 percent of the working age
population of the United States has been removed from the workforce
permanently.
The
good news in all of this is that things have at least not been
getting any worse over the last couple of years. Even though
things have been bad, at least we have had a period of relative
stability.
The
bad news is that the employment rate has not rebounded despite
unprecedented borrowing and spending by the federal government and
despite reckless money printing by the Federal Reserve.
Considering
how desperately the federal government and the Federal Reserve have
been trying to stimulate the economy, I truly did expect to see the
employment rate bounce back at least a little bit by now.
But
Barack Obama is going to prance around over the next few days and
talk about how wonderful it is that the economy created "163,000
new jobs" in July.
What
he isn't going to talk about are the millions of Americans that have
been unemployed for so long that they don't even "count" in
the official unemployment numbers anymore.
But
those people actually exist and they are really hurting. Many
of them are starting to lose their unemployment benefits and they
really do not know what they are going to do. The following is
from a recent USA
Today article....
Since abruptly losing her $312 weekly unemployment check in June, Laurie Cullinan has depleted her savings, sought food from the Salvation Army and lit candles to save electricity.
If she can't find a job this month, the Royal Oak, Mich., resident worries she'll be evicted from her apartment, an unthinkable prospect for the 52-year-old, who enjoyed a solidly middle-class lifestyle until she lost her office-manager job two years ago.
"What am I going to do if I'm homeless?" says Cullinan, who collected unemployment for 1½ years. "My mind won't let me comprehend that."
Could
you imagine having to face that?
What
would you do if you were about to be tossed out on to the street?
When
you add up all of the working age Americans without a job in the
United States today, it comes to more
than 100 million.
Some
people have accused me of lying about that figure, but it is actually
true.
There
are more than 100 million working age Americans that are not employed
right now.
And
even if you do have a job that does not mean
that you are doing well. As I wrote about yesterday, only
24.6 percent of
all jobs in the United States today are good jobs.
The
cost of living continues to rise much faster than wages are.
Many families are having a really hard time just paying for the
basics. The inflated standard of living that we have all
enjoyed for so long is starting to disappear.
An
increasing number of young people are living with their parents well
past the age of 18 because there are not enough good jobs and it is
just so hard to make it in this economy. If you can believe
it, 24
percent of
all Americans in the 20 to 34 year old age bracket are living at home
with their parents at this point.
But
we will be seeing a lot more of this as the economy gets even worse.
"Multi-generational households" will become very common,
and that is not necessarily a bad thing. Perhaps this will give
some families a chance to do some bonding.
Meanwhile,
many of our once great cities continue to rot
and decay at
a staggering pace. Today, I saw one report that discussed how
the city of Detroit has become a
dumping ground for dead bodies.
How
sad is that?
Detroit
was once the envy of the world and now it is a place where murder
victims are dumped.
These
are all indications of just how far we have fallen.
But
things are going to get a lot worse, so we should actually be
thankful for the period of relative stability that we are enjoying
right now.
The long-term
economic collapse that
we are experiencing right now will soon accelerate. Eventually
even the highly manipulated official "unemployment rate"
will soar well up into the double digits.
When
it does, the anger and frustration that is boiling under the surface
in this country is going to explode.
Let
us hope for the best, but let us also prepare for the worst.
Greyerz
- The Risk Of Systemic Collapse Is Now Enormous
3
August, 2012
“The
real unemployment is 23%. The Nonfarm Payroll going up by 163,000,
if you look at the seasonal adjustments and the birth/death model,
those two adjustments were 429,000. So they added 429,000 out of
nowhere, on paper.
If
you take those 429,000 off of the 163,000, instead of an increase,
you get a 266,000 decline in payroll. So the figures are
nonsense....
“The
unemployment situation in the US is much worse than announced, and
it’s the same all over the world. We’re talking about 25%
(unemployment) in many countries and 50% youth unemployment.
For
article GO
HERE
10
Jobs That Might Be Gone for Good
3
August, 2012
In
some parts of the economy, the job market is slowly picking up, with
employers gradually hiring back folks thrown out of work over the
last several years. The latest jobs report shows that even though the
unemployment rate ticked up to 8.3 percent, the economy added 163,000
jobs in July--a middling pace of hiring, but still, the best since
February.
Some
jobs, however, may never come back, at least not in the numbers that
existed before the recession that began in 2007. To determine which
jobs are most endangered, I used unpublished government data
gathered and analyzed by economic consulting firm EMSI of Moscow,
Idaho, to identify the change in the unemployment rate between 2000
and 2011 in hundreds of occupations.
There's
a lot of good news in the data. In more than 100 occupations, the
unemployment rate is less than 5 percent. Some of the top fields:
budget analysts, computer network architects, police detectives,
numerous healthcare professions, and many science and engineering
specialties. But on the other end of the spreadsheet, the woes of
millions of unemployed and underemployed Americans stand out. Here
are 10 professions that have declined dramatically since 2000, and
may never bounce back:
Telemarketers (unemployment
rate: 31.4 percent). Can you say "outsourcing"? Unless you
plan to move to India or some other call-center hotspot, you can
probably forget about a job in this field.
Helpers,
construction trades (27.8
percent). It's no surprise that underskilled job-site factotums can
barely find work, given the housing bust and the sharp cutback in
building. Many other jobs related to construction are high on the
list of disappearing jobs, including some skilled professions such
as construction engineers (so I won't repeat them in the list
below). Construction will probably pick up gradually, but it could
be a decade or more before it hits levels seen during the housing
bubble.
Iron
and steel workers (25.3
percent). High-tech manufacturing is growing, but many traditional
blue-collar jobs have moved overseas for good. (Again, I won't
repeat other jobs on the list that are similar.)
Packers
and packagers (18.6
percent). Amazon might be thriving, but with many consumers
reluctant to spend, a lot of other retailers are cutting back. That
affects packaging jobs throughout the entire supply chain. Many
other retail jobs are down sharply.
Grounds
maintenance workers (16.1
percent). Everybody's cutting costs, including hotels, office parks,
and other facilities that employ groundskeepers. Plus, there's
precious little construction of new commercial facilities that need
maintaining.
Tax
preparers (15.9
percent). High unemployment means fewer people filing tax returns.
Restaurant
and fast food workers (14.8
percent). Americans are saving money by dining out less. This helps
explain why the unemployment rate for 16- to 24-year-olds is more
than 16 percent, since many of the part-time jobs that used to put
spending money in kids' pockets are no longer there.
Models,
demonstrators, and product promoters (14.6
percent). It's not as glamorous as you might think. This category,
which includes a range of professionals who help show off
merchandise, is highly competitive, and as vulnerable to budget
pressures as any other industry. Median pay for a model is only
about $33,000 per year.
Childcare
workers (10.4
percent). There aren't fewer kids, but there are fewer working
parents. With many two-income families down to one income, it no
longer pays to send the kids to day care or hire a nanny.
Travel
agents (7.9
percent). The unemployment rate is below the national average, yet
this field has shrunk from 142,000 people in 2000 to barely half
that today, most of them serving corporate clients. The reasons for
the decline are obvious: Websites like Kayak and Expedia have
displaced live agents, plus, neither consumers nor travel providers
want to pay agents' fees. The good news may be that this is one
field where employees have recognized that their field is dying, and
found a different line of work.
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