Adding part-time workers to the number of officially unemployed and the discouraged workers, as labor market expert Leo Hindery, Jr., has observed, results in a rise in the real unemployment rate to 19.2 percent, or 30.6 million people.
The 650,000 jobs created or saved by the stimulus package so far
make up only a small step toward correcting the gap between the tens of
millions of unemployed people and the few openings that those people
are fighting over.
Even the administration's goal of creating
3.5 million jobs is far below what the economy really needs. With an
official unemployment rate of 10.2 percent, the gap between the number
of full-time job openings and the number of people who are unemployed
has widened.
Since the beginning of the recession in December
2007, job openings declined from 4.4 million to 2.4 million and the
number of officially unemployed persons grew from 7.5 million to 15.7
million, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statisitcs.
If
the 15.7 million officially unemployed workers were to apply for those
2.4 million jobs, the chance of any one of them finding a job are about
15 percent, or roughly the same odds as being accepted to the
University of Pennsylvania.
The official figure only counts
workers as unemployed if they have searched for a job within the past
four weeks. But, does it make sense to exclude people who have not
looked for work in the past month? Probably not, given that statistics
show workers are trying harder than ever to find a job and only give up
looking after prolonged periods of unemployment.
The average duration of official unemployment -- which, by definition, requires that people be actively searching for a job -- has increased to 26.9 weeks, or just over a half a year.
But
after many months of unsuccessful job hunting, some people do give up
hope. And after four weeks of not looking for a job, they are dropped
from official unemployment. It is primarily for this reason that since
May, the official labor force has shrunk by 1.1 million people.
The exclusion of these so-called "discouraged" workers from statistics
means that the official number of unemployed severely understates the
weakness in the labor market. If you include these workers, the unemployment rate would rise to 13 percent, or 21.3 million.
If
these workers were to apply for the 2.4 million jobs available, the
odds of securing a job would be 11.2 percent, or roughly the same as
getting into the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
It gets
worse. Another group excluded from the official unemployment report is
the growing number of part-time workers who would prefer to have a
full-time job. These workers are forced into part-time jobs or are
forced to take part-time hours because no full-time work is available.
During the current recession, workers who are "part time for economic reasons" have grown from 4.6 million to 9.3million.
Adding
part-time workers to the number of officially unemployed and the
discouraged workers, as labor market expert Leo Hindery, Jr., has
observed, results in a rise in the real unemployment rate to 19.2
percent, or 30.6 million people.
The odds of any one of these 30
million securing one of the 2.4 million full-time jobs available is 8
percent, the same as the admissions rate of the Ivy League gold
standard, Harvard University.
The 3.5 million jobs the stimulus
package aims to provide are insufficient. To get the job growth the
country needs, the White House should push for sustained infrastructure
investment, cutting corporate taxes, and increasing access to credit
for small businesses. We still have thirty million workers in the
United States who are unemployed, underemployed or discouraged and they
face the same odds of finding a job as a high school senior applying to
the world's most elite university.
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