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The extraordinary impact of unemployment levels unprecedented
since the Great Depression is arguably the most dire domestic crisis facing
the American people. In this edition, we begin a multi-week examination
of a dilemma that has eluded all attempts at resolution by the current
administration. We begin with a recitation of the statistics that reveal the
extraordinary extent of the problem.
The Statistics
The current unemployment
rate is 8.1%. Factcheck.org notes that when public sector jobs are
included in the total, America has experienced a net decrease of 316,000 jobs
since President Obama's inauguration.
At the start of the Obama administration, unemployment was
7.8%. Despite vast sums spent on President's stimulus package, it has
never been below 8% during his administration. This year, the rate reached
8.1% in April, but rose again to 8.3 before returning to 8.1 in August. Most
analysts believe the only reason it dipped back to 8.1 from almost 8.3 was
because the unemployed gave up looking.
The percentage of Americans working or actively looking for
work has descended to 63.5%, the worst number since 1981.
The number of Americans working part time because they couldn't
find full time positions rose to 9.3 million from 8.8 million. This means the
total underemployment rate, including both the unemployed, the forced part
timers, and those who have given up, is to 16.5, an increase from 16.2% the
prior month, according to a USA Today study.
Most worrisome, the number of long term unemployed (those
jobless for 27 weeks or more) is 5 million, or 40% of the unemployed.
Both the civilian labor force (154.6 million) and the labor force
participation rate (63.9%) declined in August. the employment-population
ratio is 58.3%. There are 844,000 "discouraged workers"--
those who have given up looking.
Job growth has gotten worse in 2012, averaging 139,000 per
month compared to 153,000 in 2011. Much of the very limited growth was
in low paying jobs such as leisure and food. Manufacturing edged down
in August. Average hourly earnings went down 0.1%, and "real
average hourly earnings" fell 0.7% in August, according to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. 12.5 million workers remain idled,
according to the National
Conference of State Legislators.
As this report went to press, the number of jobless claims held
near two month highs and the 4 week moving average for new claims rose by
2,000 to 377,750, according to a CNBC study. It was the fifth consecutive
weekly increase. The rate of growth in jobs went down in the latest
report. Altogether, numbers this bad haven't been seen since the Great
Depression.
Well-paid manufacturing jobs declined 15,000, the first decline
since September of last year, according to a Yahoo!finance report.
Average weeks unemployed rose to 39.2 from 38.8. The
meager reduction in the unemployment rate "is not so much in jobs
created, but instead people dropping out of the labor force" according
to Hamilton
Place Strategies.
The Economy
Writing in the Wall Street journal, Mortimer Zuckerman notes that average wage increases have
dropped to 1.6%, the lowest in the past 30 years. He also expressed
concerns that of the paltry number of private sector jobs available, 40% are
in low paying categories. Zuckerman believes that we are experiencing a
modern-day depression. California's Democrat Rep. Henry Waxman, as quoted in Beltway
Confidential, also calls the
current economic climate a depression. Josh Mitchell, also writing in WSJ, notes that the median annual household
income fell in 18 states in 2011 from a year earlier after adjusting for
inflation.
The economy is not growing fast enough to produce adequate
number of jobs. From April-June, job creation rose only 1.7%, down from
2% in Jan.-March and way down from 4.1 in the final quarter of last year,
according toHuffingtonpost.
According to Sentier Reserch, the median household income in August fell 1.1% to
$50,678. "The August decline in real median annual household
income is indicative of a struggling economy. Even though we are technically
in an economic recovery, real median annual household income is having a
difficult time maintaining its present level, much less "recovering."
While real income may have declined, costs went up. The CPI
rose 0.6% in August, gas index rises 9.0%, according to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics.
The Associated
Press reports that, home
ownership has dropped to 64.6%, the worst level in over ten years. 14.9
million, or 13% of all American households, received food stamps-the highest
level ever. The official poverty rate is a record 15%, 46.2 million
people.
Despite an extraordinary $787 billion spent in
"stimulus" spending, the economy has not only stagnated but
actually gotten worse in many areas.
According to William C. Dudley, President and Chief Executive
Officer of the Federal reserve Bank of New York:
"The
performance of the U.S. economy since the end of the recession in 2009 has
been disappointing. Real GDP has grown at an annual rate of just over 2
% over this period, and it was even slower in the first half of 2012.
As a result...unemployment remains above 8 percent-an unacceptably high
level-and participation in the jobs market remains depressed. Moreover,
about 5 million workers have been unemployed for six months or more.
This is important because long term unemployment can cause job skills to
atrophy making it more difficult for such people to find jobs in the
future. While the good news is that the job-finding rates of the
long-term unemployed have not deteriorated as many feared, we ought not to
take this for granted going forward."
Over three years after the technical end of the recession, the
share of Americans working continues at near-depression levels.
The US Commerce Department reports that:
New orders for manufactured durable goods in August 2012
decreased 13.2 percent to $198.5 billion.
Excluding transportation, new orders fell 1.6 percent. Overall
shipments fell 3.0 percent. Capital goods shipments declined 1.7 percent.
Unfilled orders fell 1.7 percent. And inventories grew 0.6 percent in August. This is the largest decrease since January 2009.
Excluding transportation, new orders decreased 1.6
percent. Excluding defense, new orders decreased 12.4 percent.
Shipments of manufactured durable goods in August, down two of
the last three months, decreased $6.8 billion or 3.0 percent to $222.5
billion. This was also the largest decrease since January 2009 and
followed a 1.9 percent July increase.
Transportation equipment, down two of the last three months,
had the largest decrease, $5.5 billion or 7.9 percent to $63.9 billion.
Unfilled orders for manufactured durable goods in August decreased
$16.9 billion or 1.7 percent to $978.7 billion. This was the largest
decrease since December 2009. Transportation equipment had the largest
decrease, $12.0 billion or 2.1 percent to $568.6 billion.
Non-defense new orders for capital goods in
August decreased $18.5 billion or 24.3 percent to $57.7 billion.
Shipments decreased $1.2 billion or 1.7 percent to $69.5 billion.
Unfilled orders decreased $11.9 billion or 2.0 percent to $580.5
billion. Inventories increased $1.5 billion or 0.9 percent to $171.9
billion.
Defense new orders for capital goods in August decreased $4.1
billion or 40.1 percent to $6.1 billion. Shipments decreased $0.1
billion or 1.7 percent to $8.1 billion.
Summary of the statistical overview
The indications are clear. The current state of the
economy is too weak to support real job growth. Issues such as the failed
stimulus program, uncontrolled deficit spending, excess regulations, the
highest corporate taxes in the developed world, uncertainty over personal
taxes, excess regulations, a partisan NLRB, international trade practices and
defense spending reductions are all taking a serious toll on the American
economy. We'll review those issues as this series continues.
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Thursday, October 4, 2012
AMERICA'S UNEMPLOYMENT CRISIS: A SURVEY OF THE ISSUES AND STATISTICS
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