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jp11

(2,104 posts)
19. I'd disagree that the real job market is even this simple to look at
Sun Sep 9, 2012, 09:01 AM
Sep 2012

it certainly is a start but there is a larger issue for the future where fewer workers are needed.

There are more people and fewer jobs that equation doesn't balance in the face of more productivity and increasing automation. There is a conversation/debate that has to happen in the coming decades about how our society works when millions of people can't support themselves or are turned into modern day peasants among the few royals and the ranks of lesser nobles beneath them.

There are millions in poverty now in our country that number will keep growing as time goes on there simply won't be enough jobs for us all let alone ones that pay a living wage.

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The unemployment rate among college grads is somewhere around 5% Cary Sep 2012 #1
This message was self-deleted by its author AnotherMcIntosh Sep 2012 #4
What we need is to get ourselves out of this liquidity trap Cary Sep 2012 #11
This message was self-deleted by its author AnotherMcIntosh Sep 2012 #13
I hear you but I don't think protectionism is as good as it sounds Cary Sep 2012 #16
This message was self-deleted by its author AnotherMcIntosh Sep 2012 #18
Inevitable. Cary Sep 2012 #20
Excellent analysis Freddie Sep 2012 #2
The Employment-Population Ratio is another measure of economic recovery. It was 63.7 (unadj) or jody Sep 2012 #3
Usually if there are unfilled jobs that don't require specific experience or education Nikia Sep 2012 #5
O is a big factor, especially since so many new jobs are McJobs. Employers assume gkhouston Sep 2012 #7
This doesn't help: Republicans Have Blocked The American Jobs Act For One Year SunsetDreams Sep 2012 #6
The problem of unemployment can't be fixed until the sea-change KG Sep 2012 #8
If fixed costs do not prohibit, production seeks lower labor cost whether textile jobs to overseas jody Sep 2012 #9
+1 moondust Sep 2012 #10
The unemployment problem is much simpler than that, MadHound Sep 2012 #12
You're forgetting something, NashvilleLefty Sep 2012 #14
"stopped offering training"! Then why is govt wasting billions training the work force for specific jody Sep 2012 #15
Maybe the government is doing that because many companies won't do it themselves jp11 Sep 2012 #17
I'd disagree that the real job market is even this simple to look at jp11 Sep 2012 #19
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