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Our measure of how bad is it in this economy for a broad swath of Americans
can be analyzed by asking three basic questions: Are people working, are they
making any money, and do they have any money in reserves? To answer these questions
and more, below are some shocking facts!
First, are people actually employed? The glum employment situation continues
to unravel and on the summer jobs front, 16 - 19 year olds are facing the worst
environment since 1954, before their parents were even born. In 2007, 51 percent
of graduating college students had jobs lined up before graduation. This year,
less than 20 percent had jobs. Because they can't find work, the youth
of America are staying at home with their parents (maybe forever) and
parents can be categorized as "payrents".
The number of unemployed workers reported in the "headline" unemployment
rate of 9.5 percent is now 15 million, but only seven million are eligible
and collecting unemployment insurance benefits. Each week, when initial unemployment
claims of over 600,000 are announced, it's a virtual certainty that a
million people have actually lost their jobs, considering 400,000 workers are
out of the work force and not eligible to file. When a million jobs a week
are lost, there is no way our current economy can replace them!
In America, only about 60 percent of workers are eligible to file for
unemployment benefits. The rest are part-time, contract workers, and those
that worked only a short time and don't qualify to receive benefits.
An alternative measure of unemployment reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics
("BLS") shows a 16.5 percent unemployment rate. This measure, called
the U-6, includes workers who would like a job but have stopped looking, and
part-timers who want full-time work (there are approximately nine million part-timers
seeking full-time employment). Unemployment and underemployment are massive.
Second, is anyone making any money? With 28 million people working part-time
and 10 million self-employed (this includes dog walkers, yoga instructors and
independent contractors, such as real estate sales agents), 38 million Americans
in the work force are working but not making that much. Many firms and state
and local governments have also begun to cut payroll hours and eliminate overtime
altogether. The weekly hours worked were at their lowest level ever recorded
in the BLS survey - if you don't work, you don't get paid!
But the survey is very likely still overestimating personal income (hourly
wages are multiplied by hours worked to give a good indication of income),
so another way to measure income is to examine tax collections. If you are
working part-time or are self-employed you're counted as working in the
survey, but if you're not paying taxes, it's because you didn't
make any money! State income tax receipts from January 2008 - April
2009 were down 26 percent from the year before, and money wired back to homes
in Mexico from America is down 20 percent.
Small businesses are also failing at a catastrophic rate. These businesses
used to be a major source of job growth and income, but not anymore! Mom and
Pop businesses have been gutted and many used personal credit cards to fund
their operations, resulting in a default rate that has grown to 12 percent
on small business credit cards.
Third, does anyone have any financial resources? The government recently reported
the savings rate had increased to 7 percent, but with personal income so grossly
overestimated, it's likely the numbers are way off. There's a big
difference between paying down your credit card debt (as your credit limit
is cut), and stashing real cash in the bank. Cash in the bank is real savings,
paying down credit card debt is not. But since the Fed cut interest rates to
zero, many older Americans, who relied on the interest to help pay the bills,
are scrambling and uncertain about the future.
In addition, 51 million Americans are collecting Social Security benefits.
Nobody would consider this demographic rich or well to do. Indeed, given the
high cost of living, you don't live on Social Security, you simply subsist.
Another 12 million people are collecting Social Security Disability ("SSI"). (If
you're 55 and used to work at an auto plant and have exhausted your unemployment
benefits, SSI is likely where you will find your friends until you turn 62
and start collecting Social Security.) And still another34 million people
are collecting food stamps, and the total is rising at the rate of 4 million
a year. (To be eligible for food stamps you need to have less than $2,000
in resources such as a bank deposit.)
RECAP: Seven million people are collecting unemployment benefits, and another
eight million are unemployed and collecting nothing! There are 38 million part-time
or self employed workers, and 2.4 million people in jail (1 in 100 adults).
51 million are collecting Social Security benefits, 12 million are on Social
Security Disability, and 34 million are on food stamps. What financial resources
can this huge segment of the population have? Not much!
I bet no one under the age of 70 can remember an economy this bad. Tens of
millions of Americans subsisting on government handouts are one paycheck away
from homelessness and hunger. The hard times we are experiencing today, due
to the misalignment of over-consumption financed by debt, are severe. It will
take at least a few more years to work down the debt, build real savings and
put the economy on a sound footing. If the American press focused on the economic
statistics that reflect the seriousness of the economic catastrophe, the officials
in Washington will surely panic. Americans could step up to the plate and ask
for some of that bailout money that Wall Street received. It's time to
get grumpy and politically active!
You have to wonder what the government will do to try and jumpstart the dying
economy. We expect three major policies by the end of the year: First, there
will be another massive stimulus for job creation; second, there will be another
round of quantitative easing from the Federal Reserve to finance the job creation
stimulus; and third, expect a major devaluation of the dollar to encourage
exports and discourage imports. God help the Federal Deficit and the saver
because printing money like crazy, and devaluing the dollar, will only get
inflation started. Whoever said that Hard Times weren't interesting?
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