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Tab Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-16-09 02:52 PM
Original message
No jobs today!


We are now looking at unemployment numbers that undermine any confidence that we might be nearing the bottom of the recession. The appropriate metaphor is not the green shoots of new growth. A better image is to look at the true total of jobless people as a prudent navigator looks at an iceberg.

What we see on the surface is disconcerting enough. The estimate from the Bureau of Labor Statistics of job losses for June is 467,000. That increases by 7.2 million the number of unemployed since the start of the recession. The cumulative job losses over the past six months have been greater than for any other half-year period since World War II, including demobilization. What's more, the job losses are now equal to the net job gains over the previous nine years, making this the only recession since the Great Depression to wipe out all employment growth from the previous business cycle.

That's bad enough. But here are nine reasons we are in even more trouble than the 9.5 percent unemployment rate indicates.

One. June's total included 185,000 people who were assumed to be at work, many of whom probably were not. The government could not identify them; it made an assumption about trends. But many of the mythical jobs are in industries that have absolutely no job creation: finance, for example. When the official numbers are adjusted over the next several months, look to some of the 185,000 boosting the unemployment totals.

Two. More companies are asking employees to take unpaid leave. These people don't count on the unemployment roll.

Three. No fewer than 1.4 million people wanted or were available for work in the past 12 months. They were not counted. Why? Because they hadn't searched for work in the four weeks preceding the survey. The assumption is that they had found work or don't want it, but there are other explanations: school attendance, family responsibilities, sheer exhaustion.

Four. The number of workers taking part-time jobs because of the slack economy, a kind of stealth underemployment, has doubled in this recession to about 9 million, or 5.8 percent of the workforce. Add those whose hours have been cut to those who cannot find a full-time job, and the total of unemployed and underemployed rises to 16.5 percent, putting the number of involuntarily idle workers in the range of an overwhelming 25 million.

Five. The inside numbers are just as bad. The average workweek for production and nonsupervisory private-sector employees, around 80 percent of the workforce, dropped to 33 hours. That's 48 minutes a week less than before the recession began, the lowest level of activity since the government began tracking such data 45 years ago. Full-time workers are being downgraded to part time as businesses slash labor costs to remain above water and factories operate at only 65 percent of capacity. If American workers were still putting in those extra 48 minutes a week now, 3.3 million fewer employees could perform the same aggregate amount of work. With a longer workweek, the unemployment rate would reach 11.7 percent, not the official 9.5 percent (which in turn dramatically exceeds the 8 percent rate projected by the Obama administration).

Six. The average length of official unemployment increased to 24.5 weeks. This is the longest term since the government started to track these data in 1948. The number of long-term unemployed (those out of a job for 27 weeks or more) has now jumped to 4.4 million, an all-time high.

Seven. The average worker saw no wage gains in June, with average compensation running flat at $18.53 an hour.

Eight. The jobs report is even uglier when you consider that the sector producing goods is losing the most jobs--223,000 in the last report alone.

Nine. The prospects for job creation are equally distressing. The likelihood is that when economic activity picks up, employers will first choose to increase hours for existing workers and bring part-time workers to full-time status.

Many unemployed workers looking for jobs once the recovery begins will discover that jobs as good as the ones they lost are almost impossible to find because more layoffs in this recession have been permanent and not temporary. Instead of shrinking operations, companies have closed whole business units or made sweeping structural changes in the way they conduct their business. For example, General Motors and Chrysler shut down hundreds of dealerships and reduced brands; Citigroup and Bank of America cut tens of thousands of jobs and exited many parts of the world of finance. In other words, we could face a very low upswing in terms of the creation of new jobs, and we may be facing a much higher level of joblessness on an ongoing basis. Job losses may last well into 2010 to hit an unemployment peak close to 11 percent. And then joblessness may be sustained for an extended period.
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sarcasmo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-16-09 02:56 PM
Response to Original message
1. The State of Michigan asked State workers to take six days Furlough, anyone who tells you the
Edited on Thu Jul-16-09 02:56 PM by sarcasmo
Economy is recovering is spewing Propaganda.
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madrchsod Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-16-09 03:05 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. has this been reported in michigan -650,000 of public incentives?
http://www.madison.com/archives/read.php?ref=/wsj/2009/07/09/0907080286.php

how is michigan taxpayers going to afford this kind of bribery?



my son lives in janesville and they are giving up on ever having gm reopen or build a new plant there. both the city and the state of wisconsin can not afford a bidding war. gm has thousands of acres in janesville and gm has`t stated what they intend to do with it. i guess the "new gm" is looking to the future and forgetting the past.
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sarcasmo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-16-09 03:17 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. I used to deliver to Janesville weekly back in the 90's, sad what GM has done.
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madrchsod Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-16-09 02:57 PM
Response to Original message
2. and no jobs tomorrow.
10`s of thousands of factories across america are shuttered and abandoned. they will never hear the sounds of machines and humans again.
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glowing Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-16-09 03:31 PM
Response to Original message
5. This is the perfect time to reconsider our entire economy and how we
would like to live from here on out. Sustainable living. Time to enjoy life and pursue other desires rather than just work and work and work to be able to afford the basic fundamentals of life.

People, especially younger generation people, are aware of the environmental issues of the day. We are also, as a world's people, much better connected via the inter-tubes, with one another. It is much harder for us to swallow genocides, starvation, wars, and corruption world wide. Many can understand that a child born in Africa starving to death or dying from lack of meds with diarrhea, is just not ok.. We can also see that the country that we live in is also a huge hypocritical state. The richest nation refuses basic necessities such as health-care, housing, food, clean air and clean water to its citizens. Money buys the quality of your life. A piece of paper printed from treasury, dictates power and influence... and those that are supposed to represent are bought by the corrupt system. AND many people have lost their entire life's work due to lack of regulations and oversight. That waking up thing is happening all around me.. and I live in FLori-duh (with exception to the Pukes in D.C. and the crazy freeper/ Christian Taliban). The idea of trying to make "fair" systems has a chance of actually happening.

We need to have a national conversation with acknowledgment to the world as a whole. Basic principles of life ought to be easier to obtain and maintain. Food, shelter, clean water, clean air should be a goal.. followed closely and assured with health-care/ wellness, education/ daycare programs, and more time to pursue personal pleasures.
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