Updated December 2016
I haven't posted on this subject for some time so I thought it would be a good time, in the interest of accuracy, to look at the real unemployment rate in the United States.
I haven't posted on this subject for some time so I thought it would be a good time, in the interest of accuracy, to look at the real unemployment rate in the United States.
The Economic Policy
Institute publishes a monthly assessment of the real state of unemployment
in the United States by including "missing workers". EPI
defines missing workers as:
"...potential
workers who, because of weak job opportunities, are neither employed nor
actively seeking a job."
As we know, the world that the Bureau of
Labor Statistics lives in, Americans are excluded from the U-3 headline unemployment rate if they aren't actively looking for work. It excludes those former workers who have given up
searching for a job, casting them aside as though they really don't matter in
the grand scheme of things. EPI feels that these "missing
workers" are key to a better understanding of the real strength of the economy
because, if the economy was stronger, they would actually be looking for a job.
Using the most current
data available (to October 2016), EPI estimates that the total number of
missing workers in October 2016 was 2,090,000. Here is a graph showing how
the number of missing workers has remained at significantly elevated levels in the seven years since the end of the Great Recession:
Here is a graph showing
how the U-3 unemployment rate compares to the unemployment rate when the aforementioned missing
workers are included:
When missing workers are
included, the unemployment jumps to 6.1 percent, well above the low of 4.0
percent seen back in December 2006 before the Great Recession took hold and 1.2 percentage points or 24.5 percent above the headline U-3 unemployment rate.
Missing workers have an
interesting age demographic as shown here:
It is quite concerning to note
that the largest percentage of missing workers fall between the ages of 55 and
64; these are the years that many workers are doing their final saving for
retirement. The missing workers that fall between the ages of 45 and 54
are also of great concern since these are the prime earning years for millions of
Americans.
While there is no doubt
that the economy has improved, at least 2 million missing workers are feeling
like the recovery since the Great Recession has passed them by. Despite
the Federal Reserve and its comments on the strength of the job market in the
United States as is telegraphed by the monthly U-3 unemployment number, it is quite
apparent that the economy simply isn't strong enough to put millions of
discouraged unemployed Americans back to work.
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