kzt wrote:Unemployment only counts people who are actively looking for work and who are known to the government as doing so. In 1982 people had hope of finding a new job. There are a lot of people who have abandoned hope of finding a job and exhausted benefits that require they make formal efforts, so they are not counted as unemployed.
The majority of the drop in unemployment over the past few years has been due to people stopping job searches after abandoning hope, not because they got a job.
There are an average of about 330,000 people who turn 18 every month. So for employment to catch up you need to employ them AND the people who lost their jobs during the downturn. Economists think 500,000 a month is a good number to improve things. We reached that exactly once in the last 6 years. Ok, how about 240,000? I count 16 months out of the last 6 years that we hit 240,00 jobs.
Not to really disagreeing more quibbling about the numbers.
This started out as what has happened since the Federal Government stopped the extended benefits. In the medium term you are correct. Short and long not so much.
In Dec 2013 Unemployment 7.9 Participation 63.7.
In April 2015 Unemployment 5.4 Participation rate 62.8.
2.5% less unemployment .9% less participation. Not a great relationship but better than what you are painting.
Do you have a cite for that 330,000 entering?
When I look from Jan 2013 to April 2015 around 5916 thousands more in the workforce, 5243 thusands more jobs.
For five years it is 12937 thousands more in the workforce, 9226 thusands more jobs.
Which is why I said once the federal government got out things started looking better. Yeh, a lot of other factors in their so it is not so clear cut but 71% jobs/pop compared to 88% in the recent past.
Have fun,
T2M
PS there is a neat spreadsheet export function on the Fred graph site. Which I will probably be forgetting over the summer. And I have been posting too much today I need to get packing and organising.
