November 9, 2009 10:06 AM
- Text
10.2% Unemployment: 1983 and 2009
(MoneyWatch) I love this chart from this morning's Wall Street Journal. It's a quick comparison between today and 1983, which was the last time the unemployment rate was 10.2% (and the last time I was considered a formidable power forward on the basketball court).
The unemployment rate's the same, the stock market bounce is close and Michael Jackson was in the headlines, but after that, lots has changed 26 years hence. Specifically, stocks are more expensive, the cost of borrowing is lower, inflation is nowhere to be found (at least for now) and Americans owe a boatload more money.
The last part of that laundry list disturbs me. While everyone was hyper-focused on the jobs report, later in the day, the Fed said consumer credit fell $14.8 billion in September (a 7.2% annual rate). It was the eighth straight monthly credit decline.
Of course this makes sense--for two decades, Americans binged on cheap credit and now find themselves in a pickle. But the overall debt level remains stubbornly high. Until household debt as a percentage of disposable income regresses to the mean, there's likely to be a continued drop in demand for new borrowing. It also means that the average American is going to be digging out of this mess for a long time.
The unemployment rate's the same, the stock market bounce is close and Michael Jackson was in the headlines, but after that, lots has changed 26 years hence. Specifically, stocks are more expensive, the cost of borrowing is lower, inflation is nowhere to be found (at least for now) and Americans owe a boatload more money.
The last part of that laundry list disturbs me. While everyone was hyper-focused on the jobs report, later in the day, the Fed said consumer credit fell $14.8 billion in September (a 7.2% annual rate). It was the eighth straight monthly credit decline.
Of course this makes sense--for two decades, Americans binged on cheap credit and now find themselves in a pickle. But the overall debt level remains stubbornly high. Until household debt as a percentage of disposable income regresses to the mean, there's likely to be a continued drop in demand for new borrowing. It also means that the average American is going to be digging out of this mess for a long time.
-
Jill Schlesinger Jill Schlesinger, CFP®, is the Editor-at-Large for CBS MoneyWatch. She covers the economy, markets, investing or anything else with a dollar sign. Prior to the launch of MoneyWatch in 2009, Jill was the chief investment officer for an independent investment advisory firm. In her infancy, she was an options trader on the Commodities Exchange of New York.
Follow on Twitter »
Latest Now in MoneyWatch
- EU: Greece must cut deeper to get bailout
- Big banks, gov't officials strike $25B deal
- LinkedIn swings back to profit
- LinkedIn doubles revenue, beats growth estimates
- Kodak to stop making digital cameras, frames
- Market cap, schmarket cap, Apple still gets no respect
- Philip Morris Int'l income up nearly 8 percent
- Survey: Small biz plans big hires in 2012
- Freddie Mac: Mortgages inch higher but stay low
- Will the European debt crisis sink Obama's re-election?
- Banks in $25B deal to settle foreclosure abuses
- Joe Coffee: Scaling up without selling your soul
- Greek agreement accomplishes nothing
- 401K plans: New rules make costs clearer
- Are women leaders selling themselves short?
- Ask the Experts: New 401(k) rules
- Mortgage lenders strike a deal
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Blasts rock Syria's 2nd largest city, Aleppo
- Obama call for manufacturing revival a tough goal
- 2nd deposition sought for convicted Ponzi schemer
- GM gets environmental OK for new China plant
on Facebook
- Tenn. father charged with murdering couple who"unfriended" daughter on Facebook
- "Person to Person" with George Clooney
on CBS News






