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Are We Entering a Jobless Recovery?

Without retraining, economists warn that many Americans will not be able to find work

January 17, 2012 RSS Feed Print

Early signs in the new year point to an improvement in the U.S. economy. The Federal Reserve recently reported that the economy "expanded at a modest to moderate pace" from November to December of last year. At the same time, stocks, which were flat in 2011, have made quick gains in the first few weeks of 2012.

But there is a downside to the Fed's favorable report and the good news on Wall Street. While the economy is growing, few new jobs are being created. The unemployment rate fell from 9.4 percent in December 2010 to 8.5 percent in December 2011. But without more dramatic job growth, low-skilled workers and the long-term unemployed will continue to have a hard time finding a job.

[See 6 Tips for Landing a Job in 2012.]

Economists now fear that the United States is entering what is known as a "jobless recovery," an economic recovery in which few new jobs are created. If economic expansion continues without adding a significant number of jobs, many unemployed workers will simply be left behind with few job prospects.

Some 23 million Americans are unemployed, and an estimated 2.5 million have stopped looking for work altogether. According to Thomas Donohue, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the current state of the economy cannot begin to solve the American unemployment problem. "As we begin 2012, we can say that the state of American business is improving—but it is doing so weakly, slowly, and insufficiently to put our nation back to work," Donohue says.

Disappearing jobs. Lee Ohanian, a professor of economics at the University of California—Los Angeles, says for many Americans, the problem with finding work is that the jobs they once had are not coming back.

According to Ohanian, for decades after World War II, many working-class Americans worked in manufacturing industries, like auto and steel. In the last 20 years, however, many of these jobs have been shipped overseas or eliminated by advances in technology. The recession of the last decade wiped these jobs out altogether.

[See Breaking Down the Income Gap Into Real Terms.]

"The guy who was making $35 an hour at General Motors doesn't want to work for $12 an hour," Ohanian says. "When people who are low-skilled get laid off and their market value falls to $11 or $12 per hour, they're bumping up against minimum wage."

Unfortunately for these workers, Ohanian adds, lawmakers refuse to acknowledge that these jobs aren't coming back or that more dramatic steps need to be taken to address the problem. "It has become politically unacceptable to say that because it paints a picture of failure," he says. "At some level, identifying the problem and being upfront about it is the first step. Until we do that, we can't deal with the underlying problems."

Education is key. The only way to solve the problem of long-term unemployment for workers with outdated skills is for them to learn new ones. Ohanian says the government should adjust unemployment insurance to include retraining in growth industries.

Education is also important. According to the U.S. Census, less than 30 percent of Americans have college degrees. Those who do complete college make an average of $51,206 per year, compared with an annual salary of $27,915 for those who don't.

[See Are Employers to Blame for the Skills Gap?]

But as college has become more important, it has also become more expensive. In 2011, tuition at the average U.S. private college was $28,500 per year. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the average cost of a year of college in 1970 was $690.

There are less expensive options. Community colleges offer courses that focus on helping people learn new skills in new industries. Many universities also offer online classes that are much less expensive than traditional studies.

Tags:
employment,
economy,
careers,
unemployment,
hiring

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In this economy you want to keep track of the purchases you make everywhere. My family and I use the iPhone app, Purchases Tracker, to take control of our spending and cash flow. It helped us to cut out those purchases that we did not realize we were making.

Richard of CT 12:40PM May 07, 2012

Retraining is not the answer.

Neither is education for that matter.

The solution to the economic problem is to share profits with the workers who actually create the wealth. Then, corporations should get a tax credit for their generosity.

There is no reason corporations cannot share at least 20% of net profits with workers. It is a re-investment into their own company. Business and industry should get a tax break only, however, if they participate in the voluntary tax credit. Everyone wins. It is both a liberal and a conservative solution.

When more households have more money to buy "stuff", demand will grow, and jobs will return.

See the 10 reasons why at www.profitsharinguprising.com

Darian L Smith of NC 2:40PM May 04, 2012

Your leaders are millionaires and have become so by entering into back room deals aimed at monumental transfers of wealth at your expense. They have elevated themselves to levels of wealth that insulate them from the realities of a dying global middle class. Even now you can find abundant information regarding their investment of wealth into commodities to protect it from the inevitable collapse of paper currencies. The predicament they have created is no longer fixable. They have succeeded in creating a two class global society. The concerns of your children will not be retirement, successful careers or technological advancement. Their concerns will their next meal, staying warm and staying alive. Welcome to the beginning of the end.

The Nothing 11:48AM February 20, 2012

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