In June
2012, 5.37 million Americans had been unemployed for 27 weeks and longer, down
from a peak of 6.73 million in April 2010 but still very highly elevated when
compared to previous post-recessional levels.
Dr. Burtless
opens by noting that, in the 11 recessions since the end of World War II,
unemployment reached the 9 percent level in only three (1974 - 1975, 1981 -
1982 and the Great Recession. What is really different this time is the
rate of long-term unemployment; for the first time, the long-term unemployment
rate exceeded 3 percent. As if that weren't bad enough, it peaked at 4.5
percent in April 2010, two percentage points higher than its previous record
and by April 2012, the long-term unemployment rate had exceeded 3 percent of
the total labor force for 34 successive months!
While these
numbers appear grim, the situation for long-term unemployment in Europe has
historically been even worse. In 2007, more than 20 percent of France's
unemployed and nearly 40 percent of Germany's unemployed had been out of work
for two years or longer. In the same year, less than 10 percent of
Americans had been unemployed for longer than one year.
American
job-seekers have historically had a welcoming job market. Between 1990
and 2007, most Americans that were classified as unemployed in a given month
had found a job by the following month. By 2007, the monthly job-finding
rate had dropped to 28 percent, falling even further to 16 percent by the nadir
of the Great Recession. Since the end of the Great Recession, while
the monthly job finding rate had improved, by the end of 2011, only 17 percent
of unemployed workers found work within a month.
The length
of time it takes to find a job is directly related to the number of job
openings. Here is a look at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis data showing the drop in the number of job
openings during the Great Recession and the very slow post-recessional rise:
In the last
quarter of 2007, there were 1.6 unemployed workers for every job vacancy.
By 2009, this had jumped to six unemployed workers for every job opening
and, by the end of 2011, the ratio was still an elevated 3.8 unemployed workers
for every job opening. No wonder the rate of long-term unemployed has not
improved to normal inter-recessional levels!
This
recession really is different. Long-term jobless workers have three things
working against them:
1.) The
workers whose skills are in shortest supply will be rehired first. Those
workers that are unemployed the longest, tend to have skills that are not
required by potential employers or work in sectors that are not hiring (i.e.
manufacturing, construction).
2.) Workers
who are unemployed for long periods become discouraged and spend less time
looking for work.
3.)
Employers discriminate against workers that have been unemployed for long
period, preferring candidates that are either currently employed or who have
just recently lost employment.
Let's take a
closer look at long-term unemployment in Europe and compare it to the United
States. European countries tend to have a very strong social safety net
for their unemployed workers; of 20 countries surveyed, the median net income
replacement rate was 60 percent over a two year period of unemployment.
This compares to only 43 percent in the United States, a level that was
reached only after special measures were passed in 2008 and 2009 that allowed
unemployed workers to collect unemployment insurance benefits for much longer
periods. Prior to that, the income replacement rate in America was a
paltry 14 percent or one-quarter of the rate of European income replacement.
Some suggest
that the changes that improved America's income replacement rate during and
after the Great Recession resulted in a higher long-term unemployment rate
ranging from adding 0.4 to 1.8 percentage points to the overall unemployment
rate. Dr. Burtless believes that the actual impact of increased
government "generosity" on the unemployment rate was closer to the
low end of this range for two reasons:
1.) Less
than 75 percent of unemployed workers qualify to collect UI benefits.
This may have resulted in non-qualified workers finding employment more
quickly since there is less competition from workers covered by UI.
2.)
Government payments of UI increases the consumption levels of the unemployed,
resulting in increased total demand for goods, services and ultimately, labor.
Given all of
this information, why should we be concerned about long-term unemployment?
Discouraged long-term unemployed workers may leave the workforce long
before they are ready to retire or may end up taking jobs that are a poor match
for their skills. This has an impact on the overall economy by lowering
output and will ultimately result in higher demands for federal programs like
Medicaid and Social Security Disability Insurance.
As well,
long-term unemployed eventually disappear from the radar screens of
policymakers. They disappear from the consciousness of politicians, the
media and the general public. Their impact on future policies to aid the
unemployed is minimized.
What can be
done to help the long-term unemployed?
1.) Since
the Federal Reserve has lowered interest rates to nearly zero, domestic demand
for goods and services cannot be increased with changes to monetary policy
(despite Mr. Bernanke's protestations to the contrary). The only other
way to stimulate domestic demand is through government stimulus, although, in
this time of a highly politically polarized Congress and high debt, this is
unlikely to occur.
2.) Replace
more of the income of the long-term unemployed. This too is not likely to
occur.
3.) Upgrade
skills through formal training. Once again, this costs money.
4.)
Selectively subsidize the hiring of long-term unemployed workers by offering
financial inducements to potential employers who hire long-term unemployed.
This could take the form of temporarily waiving the employer portion of
the payroll tax.
5.) Use a
"shared-sacrifice" approach by giving employers the discretion to cut
hours of work rather than jobs during an economic downturn, thereby lowering
the number of permanent lay-offs and long-term unemployed.
Dr. Burtless
closes by noting that the nature of recessions is changing and that employment
is slower to recover than in the past. Unfortunately, there are no easy
solutions and the current federal government debt load and fractious Congress
have made the solution to the long-term unemployment conundrum even more difficult to solve.
"What can be done to help the long-term unemployed?"
ReplyDeleteYour five points misses the most important one. Get government out of the way and let private business grow the economy in a real way. Yes, Obama, we did build that. It is because you don't understand that that we are in this mess.
The opposite is true. Give more business incentive to corporations and they will continue to outsouce jobs overseas to maximize profits since the labor costs are so much less.
DeleteAmen to that Anonymous @ 9:24AM!
ReplyDeleteI disagree with Anonymous @ 10:45AM,
ReplyDeleteBusiness Incentives tend to only be a job creator for corporate legal departments and accounting departments...
...They tend to do very little for the economic productivity of the organization as a whole. It's a return to the tax code simplification argument talked on this forum previously. (Is a high tax rate with several deductions/loop-holes better, or a lower tax rate with no deductions/loo-holes ->assuming revenue neutrality?)
This recession brought on by world debt and banksters is deep and multifacited. It would not matter what group was in power, the same things would have happened.
ReplyDeleteSolutions are not easy as they have to be multidimensional and multifacited. A hard sell for a public looking for a simple solution and a single hero to rescue the world economy.
One word - INFRASTRUCTURE.
ReplyDeleteReduce the profits on fed bonds, (they mostly fatten fat wallets), and "quantitatively ease" unemployment by using those funds to invest in a valuable commodity, (infrastructure), rather than dishing it out to the nearly non-productive money hoarding, workforce dependent class.
(How many Anons does it take to make a point? No-one knows.
ReplyDeleteC'mon fellas, show yourselves!)
There is another social policy reason to get people back to work; if people are not engaged and have no stake in the economy, it fosters poor attitudes to society as a whole.
Demand is driven by money in people's pockets. Let's put it there. At this point I'm not sure I care what jobs these long term unemployed do. I say it hardly matters in the short and maybe the medium term. We can harangue ourselves endlessly about the debt and the relatively worth of worker skills. We can fixate endlessly on taxes and regulation. We can turn all this into the endless moral plays of carrots and sticks. These are all side shows. So let's forget about all that for another day! It's a national disgrace that we are letting people die on the unemployment vine. Put them to work building anything at all, anything. And yes in the short run that's a government program. It almost makes one pine for the days of Tojo and Hitler. ALMOST.
ReplyDelete