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To: drjimmy

Clinton Administration Lost 3.9 Million Jobs

by Staff Government Writers, The Daily Republican Newspaper

SACRAMENTO DESK - The nation's economy is sluggish with jobs and productivity in a steady state of long-term decline according to the Clinton administration's labor department report released Thursday.

John Taylor, a Stanford University economist and a chief Dole economic adviser said "The job-loss rate is high for this stage of a recovery. It is hard to see any of the improvement that the [Clinton] administration claims. Job insecurity is still widespread."

The labor department reported Thursday that a total of 8.4 million people were pushed out of their jobs involuntarily from 1993 through 1995. That represented one out of every 14 job holders, compared with one out of 12 in the early 1990s.

Of those Americans who have lost their jobs since Clinton was elected in 1992, only 33 percent found work but have not earned as much or more than they had before.

"You still have many layoffs," said Thomas Nardone, a supervising economist at the labor department's Bureau of Labor Statistics, "and if you lose your job, most people don't end up in situations that are as good in terms of earnings as the jobs they lost."

The labor department survey shows a work force still suffering from job downsizing and wage stagnation. However, the Clinton administration cited the survey as evidence that "times are better."

There have been 8.4 million jobs eliminated in the Clinton administration's economy. That represents a decline of 16 percent from the 9 million lost in the three years ending in 1993, the Bureau of Labor Statistics calculated. The earlier years were mostly a time of recession and sluggish economic growth, they thought.

"Basically we are living in a situation in which public mood is that jobs are at risk," said Henry Farber, a Princeton University labor economist.

The labor department data released Thursday revealed that from the time Clinton took office in 1993 through 1995 the jobs of about 7.2 percent of the work force were eliminated.

The New York Times, in a series of articles on downsizing in March, combined the government's job displacement data into a single set of figures that reconciled overlapping numbers from different surveys. Using this data, The Times estimated that a total of 43.5 million job losses occurred from 1979 through 1995.

That series included projections for the years 1994 and 1995 that showed a modest decline in the number of jobs lost. Substituting the actual data for the projections produced a total of 43.3 million jobs lost for the 17-year period.

An article in The New Yorker quoted the White House's chief economist, Joseph Stiglitz, as saying that The Times' projections for 1994 and 1995 should be taken "with a grain of salt."

A major point of The Times series was that the level of job loss had remained higher than in past economic recoveries.

White-collar workers represented 52 percent of those who lost jobs and blue-collar workers 35 percent, much different from the early 1980s, when layoffs were largely a blue-collar phenomenon. Men still edged-out women, 56 percent to 44 percent, but women were up two percentage points from the early 1990s, while men slipped by the same amount.

People in their prime working years, 25 to 54, still represented the overwhelming majority of those laid-off: 78 percent, up a tiny percentage point from the early 1990s.

The survey, covering 50,000 representative households, found hat 73 percent of those who lost their jobs from 1993 through 1995 ere employed again when the survey was done last February, compared with 68 percent in the early 1990s. Only 9.8 percent consider themselves as job-hunting and unemployed, down from 13.1 per cent in the earlier period.

Of the 3.9 million people who lost full-time jobs under the Clinton administration's economic policies in the 1993-1994 period, 33 percent had landed new full-time jobs by last February that paid as much as or more than the ones they had lost, the report found. That was up slightly from 31 percent in the early 1990s.





14 posted on 09/06/2003 6:26:31 PM PDT by John Lenin (Cowards die many times before their deaths, The valiant never taste of death but once.)
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To: John Lenin
REAL WAGES
1947-2001

Average Weekly Earnings (in 1982 consant dollars)
For production or nonsupervisory workers on
private nonfarm payrolls
Year
Real weekly wages
% Change from previous year
1947
$196.47
--
1948
196.00
-0.24%

1949
202.58
3.36

1950
212.52
4.91

1951
215.09
1.21

1952
219.75
2.17

1953
229.35
4.37

1954
231.25
0.83

1955
243.6
5.34

1956
250.85
2.98

1957
251.13
0.11

1958
250.27
-0.34

1959
260.86
4.23

1960
261.92
0.41

1961
265.59
1.40

1962
273.6
3.02

1963
278.18
1.67

1964
283.63
1.96

1965
291.9
2.92

1966
294.11
0.76

1967
293.49
-0.21

1968
298.42
1.68

1969
300.81
0.80

1970
298.08
-0.91

1971
303.12
1.69

1972
315.44
4.06

1973
315.38
-0.02

1974
302.27
-4.16

1975
293.06
-3.05

1976
297.37
1.47

1977
300.96
1.21

1978
300.89
-0.02

1979
291.66
-3.07

1980
274.65
-5.83

1981
270.63
-1.46

1982
267.26
-1.25

1983
272.52
1.97

1984
274.73
0.81

1985
271.16
-1.30

1986
271.94
0.29

1987
269.16
-1.02

1988
266.79
-0.88

1989
264.22
-0.96

1990
259.47
-1.80

1991
255.40
-1.57

1992
254.99
-0.16

1993
254.87
-0.05

1994
256.73
0.73

1995
255.07
-0.65

1996
255.73
0.26

1997
261.31
2.18

1998
268.32
2.68

1999
271.25
1.09

2000
272.36
0.41
2001
273.26
0.47

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Sorry for the odd format. I copied it out of a chart.
21 posted on 09/06/2003 6:57:43 PM PDT by raybbr
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To: John Lenin
A major point of The Times series was that the level of job loss had remained higher than in past economic recoveries.
Don't tell this to Newsmax. Their heads will explode trying to explain how the NY Times was right then but wrong now. On second thought...
28 posted on 09/06/2003 8:18:05 PM PDT by drjimmy
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