Posted on 08/29/2013 2:42:55 PM PDT by SoFloFreeper
The percentage of Americans who have a job or are looking for one, known as the labor force participation rate (LFPR), has plunged to a 34-year low, according to a new report from staffing company Express Employment Professionals.
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
What follows is inevitable: the economic ruin.
Seriously folks, I know you all know this...but this nation is going down hill fast. And we as a people had better start acknowledging God and His Holiness or we will find ourselves like Jerusalem in 586 BC.
ping
PROTECTION FROM GUNS in the previous post should have been written protection WITH guns.
and as America tanks, everyone in Congress gets richer.
.... and even then the whoring Congress makes
US taxpayer money available for mosques worldwide,
and for weapons for al Qaeda from Libya (MANPADs)
to Egypt (SAMs) to Syria (Sarin).
Less “labor participation” (i.e. workers), less contributions to Social Security and Medicare/caid, whatever.
That is why it is important to invest in non-governmental revenue sources - stocks, bonds (some), even collectibles.
It was lower before women entered the workforce en masse. But, this time it’s largely men who are not working.
I would assume the big difference would be that women stayed home in the 50s.
Male participation has been declining for decades.
Why have male participation rates been going down for decades?
Good question. Not really sure. Could be some displacement by women entering the workforce. Could be the decline of manufacturing and agriculture and the move towards more service industry. What are your thoughts?
Certainly gender demographics are a large part of it as women entered the workforce. I read something along the lines of when the wife works the husband underperforms relative to a husband whose wife doesn’t work.
I suspect it is the combination of three major trends: women’s participation rates rising, the ability to not work (welfare, unemployment, etc.) and an aging population in which retirement comes earlier driven not just by age. Think of an 18-19 year old twenty five years ago getting a government job.
Today he’s in his forties or early fifties and better take his pension while he can. At the same time, someone who has invested decently over the last 25-35 years has had a very good run. If your house is paid off, you can retire without a lot of overhead. Looking at your graphs with the naked eye. That’s how it looks to me.
The recession is concentrated in certain sectors dragging the whole economy down with it. RE is a big problem and touches a lot of other industries.
I suspect that SSDI is a major driver. Very interesting discussion of it and its enormous growth over recent years:
http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2012/04/autor_on_disabi.html
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