This week's well-publicized unemployment rate might have remained at 10%, but a hidden problem lurks just beneath the surface.
• The number of people with a job fell by 589,000 last month.
• Even worse, the number of people outside of the labor force grew by an astonishing 843,000 in December alone (this number is used to calculate the unemployment rate).
• Since the stimulus package was passed in February, the number of people who have moved outside of the labor force has grown by 3.2 million. December's number represents more than a quarter of that number! In fact, the total number of employed persons has fallen by 4 million since the stimulus passed.
Even more startling:
• A record 6.1 million people -- representing 40% of the unemployed and 4% of the entire workforce -- have remained unemployed for over 27 weeks.
And the civilian labor force continues to shrink apace, hitting a five-year low of 64.6%:
• In December 153.059 million were in the labor force, 15.267 million were unemployed and 83.865 million were not in the labor force. This represents a 64.6% participation rate, which is a five-year low -- or 3.073 million jobs below the five-year average.
• "Had those 3 million still be in the labor force (and, of course, not employed), the number of unemployed workers would have been 18.340 million, which in turn would result in [a real] unemployment rate of 12%."
And total, non-seasonally adjusted unemployment claims just hit another record:
• Total [NSA] "insurance claims (consisting of Initial, Continuing and EUC claims) hit another record of 11,268,100".
Further, as you might expect of the Democrat braintrust of Obama, Pelosi and Reid -- and their plans to centrally plan one-sixth of the economy -- the news gets considerably worse:
• Taxes are going up for Americans with health insurance as the President "signaled to House Democratic leaders Wednesday that they'll have to drop their opposition to taxing high-end health insurance plans to pay for health coverage for millions of uninsured Americans." The taxes on so-called "Cadillac" plans will reduce the income of millions of union- and non-union workers alike.
• Married couples are also targeted under the health care bill. An unmarried couple would pay $2,000 or more in premiums the moment they were married. This represents yet another Democrat policy that undermines marriage, encourages single-parent families and strengthens the culture of dependency.
• The AP report that the "drain on federal and state finances could force Congress to consider raising the federal unemployment insurance tax".
With more and more taxes levied upon a smaller and smaller group of taxpayers, the odds that a good portion of the population will "go Galt" are skyrocketing:
• A "major reason that a depression hasn’t appeared and the public is not in open revolt" is that a record 20 million people received unemployment benefits in 2009.
• "Financial and economic history shows that the lower rungs on the chain experience hardship first [followed by] an inexorable march up the food chain... [h]owever, in this crisis, the welfare checks, food stamps and unemployment benefits are still rolling so there has not been as much impact, including political angst from this segment."
• In 2008, 46.7% of US citizens paid no federal income taxes.
• In 2009, more than 50% of US citizens are likely to pay no federal income taxes.
Disclosure: I am long in tar, feathers, pitchforks and torches.
I finally see a hockey stick graph that I believe is accurate.
ReplyDeleteAmerican Revolution II is about to begin
ReplyDeleteSpecial Election Mass.
Scott Brown (R)
DEFEATS
Martha Coakley (L)
LOL, you almost had me, until you started on your paranoid tirades. Take your meds, put on your tin-foil hat, and then start blogging.
ReplyDeleteThe number of people with a job fell by 85,000 last month.
ReplyDeleteThe number you used is not a measure of jobs, its a seperate survey of Unemployment.
You should make an effort to understand what each survey measures and what they mean -- at least if you plan on commenting on them . . .
All ready gone. (Galt)
ReplyDelete