After the 1983 recession, the economy grew by nearly 8%, yet it only lowered the jobless rate by 2.5 percentage points that year. The most optimistic projections today are for a GDP growth of 3% this year. This speaks volumes about how long it will take to lower the 9.9% (U3) unemployment we have now. U6 is at 17.1%, which includes those who have given up looking for work and those who are underemployed.
To show why this 17.1% number is more realistic, consider for a moment that, had the labor force not decreased by 661,000 in December 2009, the jobless rate would have been 10.4 percent, instead of 10%. How did the labor force decrease by this huge number you ask? Because those 661,000 people became discouraged, and just flat gave up looking for work. When that happens, they are no longer counted as part of the labor force, and consequently, not part of those considered unemployed. This gives us the “official” number the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) calls U3. When these “discouraged” workers start to once again look for work, if and when the economy starts to
really improve, you could well see unemployment soar past 11 or 12 % in 2010. The unemployment statistics (U3) number has gone down, but it is nothing but a “smoke and mirrors” spin on the real unemployment crisis masquerading as a stimulus-driven improvement.
For example: The most recent Consumer Price Index for inflation was officially 2.3%; but if you compute inflation the way BLS did it in 1980, the inflation rate would be 9.5%. Unemployment officially stands at 9.9%; but if computed the way BLS did it prior to 1994, it would come out to 22.1%. They massage the way they calculate every single number or statistic they release, to make things look better than they are.
Also, every month, BLS uses what is known as a birth-death adjustment to estimate the number of jobs created or lost from employers who start a business during the course of the year, as well as those who have gone out of business. During the April 2008-March 2009 period, that adjustment added 717,000 jobs. However, the annual revision of U.S. payrolls recently released shows that 824,000 jobs were actually
lost, instead. In other words, over 1.8 million jobs were lost over the last 23 months,
beyond those included in the official reports.
To get back to a 5% unemployment rate, in say, five years, we would have to create 15 million jobs. Therefore, we would we need to create 250,000 jobs per month. The Obama administration predicts that job gains will only average 95,000 a month for 2010. 13 years at that rate.
Can we create 250,000 new jobs per month, on average, over the next five years? If you take the best year in the last ten (2006), you get an average monthly growth of 232,000. Only someone vastly removed from reality would posit that the US could, or will, return to an economy based on the fraudulent securitization of reckless debt, which gave rise to that level of job creation.
In 1929, the U.S. unemployment rate averaged 3%. In 1933, in the depths of the Great Depression, 25% of all American workers were unemployed. Will it get that bad? Follow this link for a vivid view of just how fast we are headed toward those same numbers:
http://www.latoyaegwuekwe.com/geography ... ssion.htmlPeople need to come to terms with the fact that this is not your typical cyclical downturn where hiring is just postponed until business improves. A lot of jobs and vocational niches are going to vanish―forever…most notably, in construction and the auto industry. In December 2007, there were 1.8 unemployed workers per job opening; now, the ratio is 5.6, a jump of nearly 220%.
We are bucking several major headwinds: The refi-ATM is gone (pulling illusionary equity from your home); 32.4% of recent home sales were less than the seller originally paid; 24% of mortgages are under water; the banking system is reluctant to lend; consumers are hunkered down, creating the Paradox of Thrift, as an increase in savings reduces the consumption of goods and services (GDP), and rising energy costs, particularly, oil, that has been instrumental in the cause of most of our recent recessions, including this one.
But the biggest obstacle we face is that our debt is just too great for our level of wealth and income. The ratio of debt to GDP just passed the toxic 90% trigger point at 92%. The unfunded liabilities from Medicare and Social Security come to $99.2 trillion. 92% of the pension plans of companies are now underfunded. Defaults are guaranteed by taxpayers. No amount of economic growth can ever repay the money we owe. Politicians and the media are calling this a “financial crisis”, when, in actuality, it is a
debt crisis borne of years of deficit spending and the housing & tech stock bubbles which created illusionary wealth. That wealth is now gone, but the debt remains.
So, prepare for austerity or money printing…or both.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."