http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/100millionworkingageamericansdonthavejobs.htm
The unemployment crisis in
The
first chart that I have posted below shows the total number of
"officially" unemployed workers in
But
if you dig deeper into the numbers you quickly see that this is not true.
A lot of those workers that were formerly classified as
"unemployed" have now been moved into the "not in labor
force" category. Since the start of the last recession, the
number of Americans not in the labor force has risen by more than 8 million
according to the Obama administration. The total number of working age
Americans not in the labor force now stands at 87,897,000....
So
when you add 12,673,000 and 87,897,000, you get a total of 100,570,000 working
age Americans that do not have jobs.
Yes,
there are certainly millions upon millions of working age Americans that do not
have jobs and that do not want
jobs.
But
you have to be delusional to believe that there are nearly 88 million working
age Americans that do not have jobs and that do not want jobs.
The
Obama administration tells us that the labor force participation rate is now
the lowest it has been since 1984. But back then, a very
large percentage of women were staying home and raising families. The
percentage of stay at home mothers has declined steadily since then.
So
the truth is that the employment statistics that we are being fed are not
portraying an accurate picture of what is really going on.
As a CNN article recently explained, there
are millions of Americans that say that they would like to have a job even
though they have not been "actively" looking for one in the past four
weeks. If those people were included in the unemployment rate, it would
immediately shoot up to around 11 percent....
About
six million people claim they want a job, even though they haven't looked for
one in the last four weeks. If they were to all start applying for work again,
the unemployment rate would suddenly shoot up above 11%.
If you
want a much more accurate picture of what is really happening to the employment
situation in
Let's
take a look at the employment to population ratio for the last six years for the month of March....
March
2007: 63.3%
March
2008: 62.7%
March
2009: 59.9%
March
2010: 58.5%
March
2011: 58.5%
March
2012: 58.5%
The
percentage of the working age population that had jobs fell rapidly during the
recession and it has stayed very low since then.
When
Barack Obama tells you that "
The
cold, hard reality of the matter is that there are
millions of hard working Americans that have been sitting at home for years
hoping that a new job will come along.
Back
in 2007, approximately 10 percent of all unemployed Americans had been out of
work for one year or longer.
Today,
that figure is above 30 percent.
The
average duration of unemployment in the
And
according to a recent Wall Street Journal article,
the number of announced job cuts is actually rising again....
Also,
announced jobs cuts rose 7.1% in April, according to Challenger, Gray &
Christmas, to 40,599 — and up 11.2% from last April — another bit of evidence
that the jobs market isn’t doing well.
Economic
conditions in the
There
are two other trends that I want to briefly mention.
1) A lot of jobs that used to be very labor intensive are now
being replaced by technology. Thanks to robotics, automation and
computers, a lot of big companies simply do not need as many workers these
days. Those are jobs that are never going to come back.
2) As
labor has become a global commodity, millions upon millions of
So
The
sad truth is that the value that the marketplace puts on the labor of the
average American worker is continually decreasing.
This
is making it much more difficult to find a job and it is keeping wages down.
In
the old days, pretty much any man that was a hard worker and that really wanted
a good job could go out and get one.
But
now all of that has changed. Back in 1950, more than 80 percent of all men in the
And
sadly, the vast majority of the jobs that are being lost are good jobs.
As I wrote about the other day, 95 percent of the jobs lost during the recession were
middle class jobs.
So
how are middle class families making it these days?
Many
of them are going into tremendous amounts of debt. As a recent CNN article detailed, the average debt
load being carried by those of us in the bottom 95 percent of all income
earners has risen dramatically over the past several decades....
In
1983, the bottom 95% had 62 cents of debt for every dollar they earned,
according to research by two International Monetary Fund economists. But by
2007, the ratio had soared to $1.48 of debt for every $1 in earnings.
Unfortunately,
many American families are absolutely maxed out at this point. According
to one recent survey, approximately one-third of all Americans
are currently paying their bills late.
If
your goal is to live a middle class lifestyle, you need to realize that the
entire way that the game is being played is changing.
In
the old days, you could start out with a company as a young person and stay with
that company until you retired. If you worked hard and you were loyal,
there was a really good chance that the company would recognize that and be
loyal to you too.
These
days, most companies are absolutely heartless when it comes to their
workers. The good job that you have today could be gone tomorrow.
Workers are increasingly being viewed as "liabilities", and there is
a good chance that the moment you become "expendable" to your company
you will be kicked out on the street.
That
is one reason why I am encouraging people to consider starting their own
businesses. If you work for someone else, your security can be taken away
from you at any moment. But if you work for yourself, you aren't going to
get fired.
Unfortunately,
tough economic times are coming and things are not going to be easy no matter
what road you take. It will be imperative to work harder than ever, to
stay flexible, and to never, ever give up.