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Econwatch
December 8, 2009 1:15 PM

Job Market Is a Long Way from Recovery

By
Guy Campanile
Topics
Jobs
4963930At the end of this month the Great Recession will officially be two years old. This will be the longest economic crisis in the United States since the Great Depression and the longest American recession since Chester Arthur was president. That 1882-1885 recession was sparked when the railroad boom bubble popped, wiping-out thousands of construction jobs. Sound somewhat familiar?

Of course, all recessions result in job losses. What's helped the American economy recover quickly in the past are innovations that have created new employment to replace the jobs lost during the downturn. One recent example is the employment opportunity created by the explosion in internet-related businesses that followed the 1990-1991 recession.

Unfortunately, there does not seem to be a giant job engine quickly emerging to help the 26.9 million Americans out of work or in part-time jobs find good paying jobs that create prosperity. This is the hand the Obama Administration has been dealt as it approaches its first full year in the White House.

President Obama's new plan to push left over money from the Troubled Asset Relief Program to small business and infrastructure construction is designed to bring the unemployment rate down from 10 percent. The administration's proposal includes tax cuts for small business and tax credits to firms that do hire.

(AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Proponents of the plan are quick to point out that small businesses create about 2 out of 3 new jobs in America. Small businesses are also usually better at innovation. Somewhere there's a grad student and some buddies creating the next Microsoft. The Administration hopes these moves will help such a start-up bloom quickly.

Full Text of Obama's Remarks

There is a good chance that these new moves will help create jobs. At the very least, they should allow businesses struggling through the recession to hold onto valuable employees.

House Dems: Expect a Jobs Bill in 30 to 40 Days

But a new survey of top CEO's finds it could take 12-18 months before any growth at large companies filters through to employment. Just two in ten think they will be hiring in the next six months. At the moment it seems unlikely that the president's initiative can bridge the growing job gap that threatens to swallow-up a strong and sustained recovery.

Economist Heidi Shierholz of the Economic Policy Institute, a progressive think tank in Washington, has run the numbers and it's not pretty.

The economy needs to create 127,000 jobs a month to keep up with population growth. So to tread water in the demographic sea, the economy needed to create almost 3 million jobs over the past two years to keep up with young Americans entered the job market. Keep in mind the economy has LOST 7 million jobs over over that period.

Basically the job market is almost 11 million jobs short of the pre-recession employment rate. To fill the gap, American businesses will need to create 580,000 jobs a month over the next two years. Few economists dare predict that kind of job growth by 2011.

So where does this job gap likely leave American workers?

Based on what we hear from economists almost daily -- it's not a good place. A full recovery in the job market could take 5 years, probably longer. This will continue to be an especially hard time for hundreds of thousands of middle-aged workers. Their skills may not match well with the new industries that create future jobs. Prospects for younger workers are much better (aren't they always?)-- especially if they have a firm foundation in the so-called STEM skills -- Science, Technology, Engineering and Math.

CBS News Chief Business Correspondent Anthony Mason is looking into the job gap and what can be done to fill it for his January report "Where America Stands: The Job Gap" on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric. Based on our early reporting, I can tell you it's a fascinating topic and one that will have a remarkable impact on shaping the direction of the country over the next decade.

Today, Mr. Obama took yet another step toward filling the gap. Realistically it will take many more moves over many more months by both government and business to help repair the profound damage inflicted upon the American job market. Any poker player will tell you, it takes great skill and a whole lot of luck to build on a ragged hand.


Guy Campanile is a CBS Evening News business producer. You can read more of his posts in EconWatch here.

Add a Comment See all 35 Comments
by johnpatrick1 January 5, 2010 7:22 PM EST
Despite our protestations we are a class ridden society of super rich and those who are connected while the majority of the People are slaving away at a Bob Cratchit level of existence or have fallen through the floor boards ints abject poverty and despair. We have become an ugly land of "I've-got-mine" and screw everyone else. Our income distribution is one of the worst in the industrialized world and our education system is also class/money riven as well as are so many of our family structures broken by lack of decent well paid jobs, absent or overworked parents and hopeless future prospects.
Our day is done and we are on a sinking ship of state due to the systemized greed and avariciousness of our system which gravitates wealth and power and opportunity to an oligarchy of about 20% of the connected while the rest stagnate and self-destruct. America is fast becoming a dystopic nation.
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by Kagee1130 January 5, 2010 7:21 PM EST
It should be illegal to hire people on guest visas if there are American Citizens that are qualified for the position. I understand that this is the law in Arizona. This should be implemented across the US. People on guest visas work for much less than US Citizens. Also, I firmly believe that many of them do not have credentials that compare to the degress that are given in the US. I work in the tech industry and it is ridiculous that we allow US businesses to export jobs.
Reply to this comment
by jiminee1 January 5, 2010 7:15 PM EST
How can an employer make any headway.If they give an amployer 3000.00 dollars to hire a new employee then how is it going to be practical to the business owner? First the employer has taxes to pay,ie; state & federal on wages & insurance + thier hourly wage & benefits.How is this really helping an employer???? what am i missing here???
But guess being a politicians it sure sounds good eh??? what a freaing joke this administration is turning out to be
Reply to this comment
by jiminee1 January 5, 2010 7:09 PM EST
If we just got rid of Barney Frank,Pelosi , Reid , & OBAMA the economy would turn around lickity split. They are all a bunch of control freaks! They certainly arent helping our country...(GEEZE!- I hope i didnt hurt thier feelings)
Reply to this comment
by billy377 December 9, 2009 10:36 PM EST
More troops, more troops, more troops!!! The budgets gone to hell, our young die in a war that shouldn?t be...
Obama this isn?t the American way, Obama it?s in your hands.
Here?s an article with the latest
<a href="http://ketiva.com/Politics_and_Government/whats_with_the_bailout_obama1.html">http://ketiva.com/Politics_and_Government/whats_with_the_bailout_obama1.html</a>
Reply to this comment
by billy377 December 9, 2009 10:30 PM EST
More troops, more troops, more troops!!! The budgets gone to hell, our young die in a war that shouldn?t be...
Obama this isn?t the American way, Obama it?s in your hands.
Here?s an article with the latest
<a href="http://ketiva.com/Politics_and_Government/whats_with_the_bailout_obama1.html">http://ketiva.com/Politics_and_Government/whats_with_the_bailout_obama1.html</a>
Reply to this comment
by sjc_1 December 9, 2009 3:06 PM EST
We can create a lot of stable good paying jobs in renewable energy. We need renewable energy and wind turbines, solar PV, solar thermal, geothermal and many other technologies will help and provide jobs. There is a story on here about universities installing geothermal heating systems to save money. All those installations create jobs and save energy. Lots of things need to be done and we have the people to do them, so let's get going.
Reply to this comment
by hartmanlord December 9, 2009 10:37 AM EST
I am an American patriot and believe in the capitalist system. Repeat, I believe in the capitalist system.

The capitalist system is broken like a spoked wheel on a wagon. As the economy has ebbed and waned since the last depression, the distribution in wealth and income have become out of balance (the top 10% now have 50% of the income and 86% of the wealth), just as it was in 1929. There is too much "hoarding" and not enough "consumer spending". To correct the very system that I believe in requires a correction in that balance. That requires a higher progressive tax on the top group and a lower tax on the lower "working" class. This is not a hand out as all the wealthy want to promote and not socialism. This is fixing a broken system.

In contrast the wealthy decision makers of this country want a welfare state "handing out" trillions of dollars to the wealthy to create JOBS for which there is no demand (Trickle Down ECON 401). It is like finding a broken spoked wheel and breaking out the rest of the spokes to fix it!

When the government wants to slow down the economy, do they tax the wealthy unless they dismiss workers. This would make just as much sense.
Reply to this comment
by PederValentine December 9, 2009 9:15 AM EST
One of the biggest "job engines" available to the US right now could be acquired by legalizing medical marijuana. The majority of the populus is in favor of this movement as indicated by polls issued by change.gov in the initial days following the election of Obama. The question was, what should the Obama administration address as top priority, and legalizing medicinal marijuana ranked as #1. It is time that the freedom of choice be given back to Americans and the economy could definitely use the boost in jobs that would be created by all tasks from growing, harvest, packaging, taxation, regulation, logistical, and on and on.

Peder Valentine
Author - Chronic Book
www.chronicbook.com
Reply to this comment
by Old_Engineer December 8, 2009 6:42 PM EST
Businesses do not pay taxes. Since they cannot coin money, they must pass all costs on to customers or employees. While this fact may be unpopular, it is nonetheless true.The folks who pay the taxes that give us all the benefits of government are the employees of private industry in both large and small businesses. It should be obvious that although policemen, firemen, and teachers also "pay taxes", their taxes are passed through by their employers (the other taxpayers working in private industry) just as businessmen must do. Therefore, it is essential to foster private sector employment, since only that can fund taxes to repay our debt, and fund the legitimate functions of government.
I hope someone in Washington "gets it". I worry,though, since so many of them have never signed the front side of a paycheck.
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