COMMENTARY
![]() by Ted Rall |
"Worst U.S. Jobs Data in a Year Signals Stalling Recovery," The New York Times ran as its lead headline on June 2. The Labor Department reported that the U.S. economy created 69,000 jobs during May. The three-month job-creation average was 96,000. Unemployment ticked up a tenth of a point, from 8.1% to 8.2%.
Once again, the media is downplaying a blockbuster story—recovery? what recovery?—by dulling it down with a pile of dry, impenetrable statistics.
Wonder why you can't find a job or get a raise, and your house has been sitting on the market for years? The new jobs numbers are the key to understanding how bad the economy is—and why it's not likely to get better any time soon.
Q: If nearly 100,000 Americans per month are finding jobs, why are securities markets tumbling?
A: Because it's actually a net jobs loss. The U.S. population is growing, so the work force is too. We need 125,000 new jobs a month just to keep up with population growth. "In the last 22 months, businesses have created more than three million jobs," President Obama claimed in his January 2012 State of the Union speech. True or not, a more straightforward claim would have been net job creation: 350,000 jobs over 22 months, or 15,000 per month. (Politifact rates Obama's line as Half True.)
Q: If we're losing jobs, why is the unemployment rate hovering? Why isn't it going up faster?
A: Discouraged workers, i.e. people who would take a job, but have given up looking, don't count as officially unemployed. Neither do those whose unemployment benefits have run out, yet haven't found new work. Ditto for those who are underemployed, such as a laid-off middle manager who earned $100,000, now scraping by on a fraction of her former salary by taking odd jobs.
The officially unemployed—men and women who lost their jobs recently enough to still collect unemployment benefits—are remaining more or less steady. Because the number of long-term unemployed is rising, however, the unofficially unemployed is growing fast—but neither the government nor the media acknowledges their existence.
To muddy things up even further, the feds have rejiggered the numbers to make it look like there are fewer officially unemployed than there used to be. The respected blog Shadow Government Statistics, which calculates unemployment using the way the Labor Department did until the 1980s, says this Alternate Unemployment Rate is about 23%—about the same as at the peak of the Great Depression.
No wonder why there are so many empty storefronts.
The really interesting number is the Labor Force Participation Rate: how many people want a job, but don't bother blitzing the Internet with their resume? Melinda Pitts of the Atlanta branch of the Federal Reserve Bank pointed to "marginally attached" "nonparticipants" in the labor force. "A nonparticipant who is marginally attached indicates they want employment or are available for employment. Also, they indicate having looked for a job in the previous year but not actively looking for a job at present," she said. This group is failing to return to the "real" labor force at higher rates than in the past.
Q: So what's up?
A: The jobs figures reflect a big structural problem in the U.S. economy. Real wages have been steadily dropping since the 1970s. We're creating a permanent class of unemployed and underemployed. And there's no help on the way from government or the private sector, both of which are cutting back and laying off. Even if we got "up" to 125,000 new jobs a month, that would still leave at least 8.1 million people who lost jobs between 2007 and 2010 out of work.
That's a huge hole. Taking Obama at his Half True word of 15,000 net new jobs a month, it would take 45 years to find gigs for the victims of the 2007-to-2010 subprime mortgage meltdown. Only something big and dramatic, like a new FDR-style Works Progress Administration, could fill it. "Normal" post-recession growth can't do it. And this recovery—if you can call it that—is anemic at best.
Q: Anything else?
A: Yeah. Jobs don't equal jobs. If you replace a $70,000-a-year job with a $60,000-a-year job, that's a net decline in income. Politicians will claim that the old lost jobs have been replaced with new ones, but multiply that trend over millions of workers, and you'll see reduced consumer spending. Among the still-employed, inflation-adjusted wages are dropping.
Oh, and what about the debts people accrued while they were between jobs? Because many employers refuse to hire jobseekers with bad credit, the unemployed are punished for being unemployed with…more unemployment. As for those who return to work, even workers who get the same pay have to pay off credit cards bills they lived on.
The economy is a whale of a problem. But politicians of both parties—and the media—are only paying it the thinnest of lip service.
Ted Rall is a columnist, cartoonist, author and independent war journalist. He is the winner of numerous awards and a Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. His new book, "The Book of Obama: How We Got From Hope and Change to the Age of Revolt," comes out today.




There is a simple solution to poor US job growth. Show me a country with weak property rights and I’ll show you a country with a weak economy and high unemployment. It’s that simple.
"patent reform"...“America Invents Act”
“This is not a patent reform bill” Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA) complained, despite other democrats praising the overhaul. “This is a big corporation patent giveaway that tramples on the right of small inventors.”
Senator Cantwell is right. Just because they call it “reform” doesn’t mean it is. The agents of banks, huge multinationals, and China are at it again trying to brain wash and bankrupt America.
They should have called the bill the America STOPS Inventing Act or ASIA, because that’s where it is sending all our jobs.
The patent bill is nothing less than another monumental federal giveaway for banks, huge multinationals, and China and an off shoring job killing nightmare for America. Even the leading patent expert in China has stated the bill will help them steal our inventions. Who are the supporters of this bill working for??
Patent reform is a fraud on America. This bill will not do what they claim it will. What it will do is help large multinational corporations maintain their monopolies by robbing and destroying their small entity and startup competitors (so it will do exactly what the large multinationals paid for) and with them the jobs they would have created. The bill will make it harder and more expensive for small firms to get and enforce their patents. Without patents we cant get funded. In this way large firms are able to play king of the hill and keep their small competitors from reaching the top as they have. Yet small entities create the lion's share of new jobs. According to recent studies by the Kauffman Foundation and economists at the U.S. Census Bureau, “startups aren’t everything when it comes to job growth. They’re the only thing.” This bill is a wholesale destroyer of US jobs. Those wishing to help fight this bill should contact us as below.
Small entities and inventors have been given far too little voice on this bill when one considers that they rely far more heavily on the patent system than do large firms who can control their markets by their size alone. The smaller the firm, the more they rely on patents -especially startups and individual inventors. Congress tinkering with patent law while gagging inventors is like a surgeon operating before examining the patient.
Those wishing to help fight big business giveaways and set America on a course for sustainable prosperity, not large corporation lobbied poverty, should contact us as below and join the fight as we are building a network of inventors and other stakeholders to lobby Congress to restore property rights for all patent owners -large and small.
Please see for a different/opposing view on patent reform.
This is government today: all talk and no action.
The media also are ignoring the relationship between mass immigration and jobs. Why, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics is saying 20 million Americans are unable to find full-time employment, is the federal government continuing to issue 125,000 work permits to foreigners every month and allowing 7 million illegals to keep their jobs in the construction, manufacturing, transportation and service industries? Yes, our population continues to grow and 80 percent of this growth is driven by immigration, according to the Pew Hispanic Center.
Hello?
Dave Gorak
Executive director
Midwest Coalition to Reduce Immigration
La Valle, WI
Ted Rall, you are killing it as usual. Excellent perspective, excellent writing, I feel like you have the ability to present complex issues clearly to a mass audience backed up with facts galore. Now it is time to go get that mass audience. You need some web presence, guy. Like real bad. I really hope the best for you, there are many of us that do.
Congress and the President aren't the only ones to blame. The Fed has ignored its dual mandate to keep both inflation and unemployment in check. The Fed could be more creative (see: Sweden) to bring down unemployment. Monetary interventions probably did more than the WPA in the Depression (though, of course, expansionary fiscal policy can't hurt).
it's refreshing to read such a clear, cogent, and BS free analysis, even if the story is dismal. Truly the prose equivalent of a sharp editorial cartoon (no surprise there).