The
employment situation in the United States is much worse than even the
dismal numbers from last week’s jobless report would indicate. The
nation is facing a full-blown employment crisis and policy makers are
not responding with anything like the sense of urgency that is needed.
The employment data
for July, released by the government on Friday, showed that private
employers added just 71,000 jobs during the month and that the
unemployment rate remained flat at 9.5 percent. But as bad as those
numbers were, if you look beyond them you’ll see a horror show.
Government workers were walking the plank from coast to coast. About
143,000 temporary Census workers were let go, and another 48,000
government employees at the budget-strapped state and local levels lost
their jobs. But the worst news, with the most ominous long-term
implications, was that the reason the unemployment rate was not higher
was because 181,000 workers left the labor force.
With many of them beaten down by the worst jobs situation since the
Great Depression, they just stopped looking for work. And given the
Alice-in-Wonderland way in which we compile our official jobless
statistics, they are no longer counted as unemployed.
Charles McMillion, the president and chief economist of MBG Information
Services in Washington, is an expert on employment and has been looking
closely for years at the issue of labor force participation. “Over the
past three months,” he said, “1,155,000 unemployed people dropped out
of the active labor force and were not counted as unemployed. Even
ignoring population growth, if these unemployed had not dropped out of
the labor force, simple arithmetic shows that the official unemployment
rate would have risen from 9.9 percent in April to 10.2 percent in
July, rather than — as it has — fallen to 9.5 percent.”
Because of normal growth in the working-age population, the labor force
increases by roughly 150,000 to 200,000 people per month. If those
folks were factored in, said Mr. McMillion, “unemployment now would be
even higher than 10.2 percent.”
We are not even beginning to cope with this crisis, which began long
before the onset of the so-called Great Recession. The economy is
showing absolutely no sign of countering the nation’s staggering jobs
deficit.
“We have a large number of people who have just given up hope of
finding a job,” said Mr. McMillion. He pointed out that there are
record numbers — “I mean lights-out record numbers” — of long-term
unemployed people who are still looking for jobs. Of the 14.6 million
men and women officially counted as unemployed, nearly 45 percent have
been out of work for six months or longer.
The Times’s Michael Luo wrote a moving article last week about the
people who have started calling themselves the “99ers,” meaning they
have been out of work for more than 99 weeks and thus have exhausted
the absolute maximum in unemployment benefits. Nearly a million and a
half people have been out of work for at least 99 weeks — and not all
of them qualified for jobless benefits.
Said Mr. McMillion: “When you combine the long-term unemployed with
those who are dropping out and those who are working part-time because
they can’t find anything else, it is just far beyond anything we’ve
seen in the job market since the 1930s.”
They may be thinking about this in Washington, but they sure aren’t
doing much about it. The politicians’ approach to the jobs crisis has
been like passing out umbrellas in a hurricane. Millions are suffering
and the entire economy is being undermined, and what are they doing?
They’re appropriating more and more money for warfare while
schizophrenically babbling about balancing the budget.
At some point we’re going to have to claw our way out of this denial.
With 14.6 million people officially jobless, and 5.9 million who have
stopped looking but say they want a job, and 8.5 million who are
working part time but would like to work full time, you end up with
nearly 30 million Americans who cannot find the work they want and
desperately need.
We’ve got more and more people in our working-age population and fewer
and fewer jobs to go around. Mr. McMillion tells us that there are now
3.4 million fewer private-sector jobs in the U.S. than there were a
decade ago. In the last 10 years, we’ve seen the worst job creation
record since 1928 to 1938.
We’re not heading toward the danger zone. We’re there. The U.S. will
not remain a stable society if this great employment crisis is not
addressed head-on — and soon. You cannot allow joblessness on this
scale to fester. It’s wrong, and the blowback will be as destructive
and intolerable as it is inevitable.
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