Invisible Americans: The Overlooked Millions Inside Those Job Numbers
Some politicians are saying that the latest unemployment report is good news, but it's not. It shows us that this country is still in crisis. It shows us that the government needs to act quickly and aggressively to create jobs, and to restore the lost earning power of the average American who has a job.
Most of all it shows us that millions of struggling people are still invisible in the Nation's Capitol.
This week the Occupy movement is holding a series of "Take Back the Capitol" events in Washington. Let's hope it shines some light on the country's unemployed, under-employed, and under-earning millions. Until now, they've been pretty much invisible in that town.
The Invisible Americans are all around you. They're in your state, in your community, maybe in your family. Maybe they're your kids, just out of college. Maybe they're your fifty-something uncles and aunts, your grandparents, your grandchildren. They're right there in the jobs report, for anyone with the eyes - and the willingness - to find them.
Invisible: Millions of the long-term unemployed.
While some celebrated an unemployment rate of "only" 8.6 percent, half that change was explained by the fact that 315,000 people dropped out of the labor force. Job creation barely kept pace with the entry of new people into the workforce.
Those 315,000 people join the 5.7 million people officially classified as long-term unemployed. That number is at historically high levels, representing nearly half (43 percent) of all the jobless people in this country.
It's not that they don't want jobs. Most of them have fallen into despair. Even worse, what they may have fallen into is realism. Unless we use the power of government to do something, some of them will never work again. They're falling out of the "normal" economy and into a new reality of persistent joblessness and, for some, eventual poverty.
Invisible: Segregation on the unemployment line.
The official jobless rate for white people is 7.6 percent, versus 15.5 percent for African Americans and 11.4 percent for Hispanics.
And those are only the official numbers. The figures are much higher if you count the long-term unemployed, the under-employed, and "discouraged" workers.
In a nation that prides itself on being the land of opportunity, we're denying entire groups of people the chance for a better life.
Invisible: The jobless generation.
There's a silent epidemic of youth unemployment. Official teenaged unemployment is 23.7 percent, and the real rate is much higher. Recent college graduates face historically high jobless rates - along with historically high student debt.
Studies show that young people who begin their work lives un- or under-employed face an entire lifetime of lower income. By failing to act, we're betraying our own children and throwing away an entire generation of young people.
Invisible: The under-employed.
There's a silent epidemic of under-employment. There are 8.5 million people who want to work full-time but can only get part time work. in that category. That figure dropped slightly, but we don't know how much of the drop was due to people finding full-time work or being laid off altogether.
And remember, underemployed people aren't just making less money. In most cases they're also going without health insurance or other benefits. They're struggling on the margins of working America, barely surviving and never knowing how much money the'll earn from one week to the next.
Invisible: The vanishing public servant.
While Washington politicians drone on about "budget cuts," there's not much discussion of the fact that many of those cuts increase unemployment - at the Federal, state, and local levels. Government jobs have been dwindling since 2008, and the shrinkage is continuing a time when we need more of them.
Teachers, police officers, highway toll takers, postal workers - you name it, they're losing their jobs. And the only debate in Washington seems to be, How many more of them can we make unemployed?
Invisible: The drowning middle class.
Average hourly earnings for all nonfarm employees decreased last month by 1 percent. Average hourly earnings increased by only 1.8 percent over the last year, while the cost of living (measured by the Consumer Price Index) increased 3.5 percent.
Once again average Americans have fallen behind in earnings and has seen their standard of living decline. Meanwhile, incomes continue to skyrocket for the wealthiest Americans. Income inequality is the worst it's been since the Great Depression.
Welcome to the New Gilded Age.
Political Blindness
This week we heard almost nothing in Washington about direct action to address these crises. The Democrats' "payroll tax holiday" would provide urgently needed ongoing relief for the battered middle class, and would also have a mild job-creating effect. But it would do so in an inefficient way, and also needlessly and recklessly endangers Social Security.
Republicans have no solution at all - just more of the same policies that caused these problems in the first place.
Our neighbors deserve better than this. We deserve better than this. Change starts with a simple statement we can make to those around us, and they can make to us: You're not invisible. I see you.
People in Washington over-complicate the debate by tinkering at the margins: tax-break this, incentive that. Those things will have some effect, but there's a simpler and better way to fix the joblessness problem: Put people to work. At a time when this country needs trillions of dollar in infrastructure repair, government should hire people and get on with it.
George W. Bush had no problem doing that a few years ago. He signed a bill spending more than a quarter of a trillion dollars on infrastructure spending while the Republican Speaker of the House bragged about creating. But Republicans would apparently rather prolong the suffering so they can defeat Obama and the Democrats in 2012.
As for the Obama Democrats, either they don't understand the problem or they don't think it's politically smart to propose fixing it. I suspect it's the latter - and they're dead wrong. The President's jobs bill had some useful ideas. But the President went small on the fixes and, in his typical fashion, couldn't resist pushing useless conservative "job creation" ideas along with the good ones.
Far-Sighted
We need a massive jobs program now to fix our crumbling bridges, highways, railroads, dams, and public buildings. We need to fix wage stagnation by going back to the policies that built the middle class, beginning with stronger collective bargaining rights for working people. Unions were one of the engines of post-World War II prosperity, and the war on unions needs to stop.
We also need higher taxes for the wealthy, tax advantages for companies that hire, and higher taxes for those who make money by gambling, trading other people's debts, or hedging against the success of the American economy. We need to downsize the financial sector, which is capturing too much corporate profit and squeezing out job-creating businesses.
And we need to rebuild the firewall between banking and speculating, so we can end too-big-to-fail and the boom-and-bust cycle that keeps crashing the economy.
Vision Test
Some political party, maybe one that has had a reputation for defending the middle class, ought to say something this: We know what's going on out there. We understand the problem. Here's how we would fix it. We're going to introduce these measures in the House and Senate wherever and whenever we can, so you can see who's fighting for the Invisible Americans, and who's fighting against them.
But no party appears willing to do that, at least not without the presence of a non-partisan movement that forces it to act.
Someday historians will review this country's history to find those times when our people and our leaders responded to a crisis with vision and courage. They'll see the millions of Americans who rose to the occasion during the War of Independence, the Civil War, World War II, and the Great Depression.
But will they see us, or will we have become ... invisible?
Our political leaders need to be pressured - a lot - which is why the Occupy events in Washington are so important. We need to build and maintain a movement for real change, a movement that sees the invisible ones among us, a movement that sees each of us and makes us visible, a movement that fights unrelentingly for a better society.
Hope to "see" you soon - on the barricades.
CONNECT














20 comments on "Invisible Americans: The Overlooked Millions Inside Those Job Numbers"
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December 09, 2011 12:21pm
right, the sole proprietors who cannot find work, the one man shops, the mom and pop organizations who are not unemployed but nobody frequents their establishments any more - these scores upon scores of people are not in those figures and add hundreds of thousands to the under-employed and unemployed.
December 07, 2011 11:15am
New Mexico's Gary Johnson is worth NOT forgetting...http://www.gq.com/news-politics/politics/201111/gary-johnson-republican-candidate-debate-interview?currentPage=1
December 06, 2011 3:43pm
DRWHITE is an Internet troll that enters a discussion group and gives an insulting, diametrically opposed rant with the hope of starting a flame war. Don't feed the trolls.
December 06, 2011 10:24am
the politicians of both parties know what is really happening, but they want to keep their jobs and so parrot what the party tells them to say And the Parties co what the Elite tell them to do Its so simple We NEED TO THROW THEM ALL OUT
December 06, 2011 9:47am
Near as I can tell, Tea Partiers and Republicans are one and the same. They are the "Conservatives" who are waging war on the "Liberals". I've listened to the news on most all of the news channels and I know that 'Liberal' is a dirty word not to be used in public.
My question is: What does a Conservative conserve?
The only thing I have come up with so far is; MONEY. They conserve money and hide it away where Consumers like me cannot get at it.
December 05, 2011 5:45pm
I am an "INVISIBLE." This is why.
THE NEW AMERICAN PIRATES, ARE KILLING AMERICANS.
This is not about glamorized or fictional piracy. This is, “real piracy.”
Hundreds of our wealthiest leaders and most powerful corporations know that in the next few years, they will be able to siphon, skim, and steal, so much “NEW CASH,” that they and their progeny will be ultra-rich for generations to come.
No, this is not funny, or fiction, or a conspiracy, it is just simple greed and simple theft.
The new pirates of America have launched an all-out siege on us in order to capture, amass, and hold trillions of dollars for themselves.
All of the recent political power grabs and nonsensical debating is purely a slight-of-hand deflection. President Obama, Democrats, Republicans, the International Press, and even the Tea Party, are watching the tiny pea in the shell game…while the rich and powerful “Piratical Right” is stealing America right out from under us.
Consider that their combined total plunder from corporate flipping, downsizing, offshore labor, speculation, price fixing of oil and energy plus, corruption in defense, healthcare, banking, student loans, foreclosures, etc., etc., is a trillion dollar treasure for these pirates.
Go ahead, put your own calculator to it.
Are they smarter than we are? Yes, and they are laughing at us. I, we, you, and all of us, have not been able see the big picture of what is happening to our own country and to our own people. The rape and theft of America, has been cleverly packaged, promoted, and sold under the guise of “cost-cutting,” “deregulation,” and “free enterprise.”
The “Piratical Right” is directly responsible for millions of people dying, getting sick, losing their jobs and homes, losing their ability to fight, their spirit, and even losing their will to live. The sick smell of this carnage now permeates the air across America.
To us, this is all unimaginable, because we look for some sense or the morality of things. These modern-day American pirates however, have no moral compass. They are devoid of any conscience, humanity or soul, and are feeding on the flesh of the American people.
Don’t look to the President, the Senate, Congress, the press, or any political party to help. Sadly, they just don’t see it, don’t care, or are part of it. “We the people” are on our own. Start asking questions. Demand answers. If we don’t fight back America…who will?
History has taught us how to stop piracy.
V
December 05, 2011 5:22pm
Come to Australia..... lots of work for those that know how to work hard.... we cant find people sober enough from drugs and alcohol to stick at a job for more than a couple of months.... unskilled reliable hones workers are always welcome!!! Given that we in Oz are about two years behind the American Economic woes, it is frightening to think that what is happening there is yet to hit with its full impact here..... in the lucky country.... hmmmm!
December 05, 2011 5:22pm
It seems like a four day work week would solve a lot of problems. There would be a transition for most of us, but if you consider the problems it would solve, namely people not working, tax money for entitlements, lack of free time, jobs for everyone, and the unequal distribution of our country's wealth, it makes a lot of sense.
December 05, 2011 4:58pm
What about independent contractors who are not measured for employment status. I am A independent contractor who gets just enough work to barely survive but due to being self employed cannot receive unemployment.How many people fall into this category of not having enough work we dont count on the unemployment books so is the unemployment rate more like 30 percent.It seems to me that we are being taxed without representation when no represenative will do anything from either party that it is time to throw the whole lot of them out on there asses.
December 05, 2011 4:58pm
When progressives
December 05, 2011 4:03pm
I have held a "technical job" for over nine years, mastered all aspects of it thoroughly, dealt with a doubling of workload when one coworker left for higher pay elsewhere, and then coped with yet another doubling of workload when another coworker left for a promotion. My "reward" for placing the job above vacations or necessary sick leave has been to see my job reassigned to someone else at organization headquarters who will most likely get the pay increase that I was denied.
To all others who put in uncompensated hours in the hope that they can hang on long enough for employers to notice and reward their initiatve, I say that you'd better look elsewhere for employment NOW instead of waiting and eventually being pushed aside as I have been. The 40-hour week and overtime pay ended under "Dubbayah." Were the old rules about work hours and overtime pay fully enforced, the unemployment rate could be cut in half. Employers, however, have the arrogance and deliberate corruption that go with absolute power (supported fully by all the Reagan and Bush appointees on the Federal bench). Most of us who have unions have COMPANY unions now, with our stewards and presidents going golfing with the same people who want to crush us.
The big question is where workers can turn for help. Obama is Mr. Ivy League, always trying to ingratiate himself with the enemies of working people through his "bipartisan" approach. The G.O.P. has long stood for Big Money, and it's not going to change except to slip ever further toward the fascist extreme. I'm afraid that I'm too old to be able to look forward to genuine change through a new party that will seriously advocate for the overworked and underpaid... I can only hope that it will happen in time to prevent the next generation from starving and or working themselves to death in support of the "free market."
December 05, 2011 4:03pm
When progressives & liberals start pointing out that the decline of America can be traced to conservatism they can make a very strong case against it. Quit complaining about results of conservative policies, we can see that, it's all around us. Make the choice easier for Americans to understand progressive vs conservative. Start using the word conservative explain what it means and how conservatism runs counter to democracy. The conservative movement has been successful. Conservatives are in the majority of most of our state & federal legislative houses, executive & judicial branches. These politicians proudly run and get elected on being strong conservatives. Why aren't they asked to defend how their conservative policies have weaken this great nation. Remember FDR!
December 05, 2011 4:02pm
When progressives
December 05, 2011 2:55pm
Excuse me "drwhite", but there are NO technical jobs "going wanting". That's pure Bull, designed to blame the victims of unemployment.
Ask at Monster.com or CareerBuilder.com or any other job finders - even Indeed.com, which just "spiders out" to the other sites and re-lists their jobs - you'll find that for every job posted there are between 400 and 500 resumes received PER DAY.
And my Bachelor's degree hasn't been good enough to land one yet, since there are people with Master's degrees competing for jobs paying $25K/year.
So stop blaming the victims and wake up to the realities.
December 05, 2011 1:56pm
What I don't get is why the 100's of thousands of technical jobs that go wanting are never mentioned. Someone in the office explained it to me. The folks at those sit ins aren't qualified for those 2 yr. technical school type jobs that only pay between $40 and $50 thousand per year. Hmmmmm. Now I get it.
December 06, 2011 5:23am
You are somewhat uninformed. I worked in technical jobs for many years and have friends that have even more training and experience that have been out of work for years now. Graduates with degrees in Chemistry, Computer Science, Mathematics... all out of work after years of using their expertise. And, the jobs that are offered occasionally are paying wages you could earn at WalMart while demanding skills that cost years and hundreds of thousands of dollars to accumulate.
2 yrs technical school types my ass!
December 05, 2011 1:57pm
Oh, check this out....
http://www.indeed.com/jobs?q=technical&gclid=CI7os_3o66wCFWcRNAodUDzQMA
December 05, 2011 1:26pm
Let's call this the War of Independence II. Or Civil War II. Or World War III. Its time to end all forms of slavery and bondage and oppression