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Skyrocketing Unemployment

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090306/ap_ ... fi/economy

Jobless rate bolts to 8.1 pct., 651,000 jobs lost

WASHINGTON – The nation's unemployment rate bolted to 8.1 percent in February, the highest since late 1983, as cost-cutting employers slashed 651,000 jobs amid a deepening recession.

Both figures were worse than analysts expected and the Labor Department's report shows America's workers being clobbered by a wave of layoffs unlikely to ease in the coming months.

...

Employers are shrinking their work forces and turning to other ways to slash costs — including trimming workers' hours, freezing wages or cutting pay — because the recession has eaten into their sales and profits. Customers at home and abroad are cutting back as other countries cope with their own economic problems.

Since the recession began in December 2007, the economy has lost 4.4 million jobs, more than half of which occurred in the past four months.

...

With employers showing no appetite to hire, the unemployment jumped half a percentage point from 7.6 percent in January. That was the highest since December 1983, when the jobless rate was 8.3 percent.

All told, the number of unemployed people climbed to 12.5 million. In addition, the number of people forced to work part time for "economic reasons" rose by a sharp 787,000 to 8.6 million. That's people who would like to work full time but whose hours were cut back or were unable to find full-time work.

If part-time, discouraged workers and others are factored in, the unemployment rate would have been 14.8 percent in February, the highest on records dating to 1994.

...

Meanwhile, the average work week in February stayed at 33.3 hours, matching the record low set in December.

...

Construction companies eliminated 104,000 jobs. Factories axed 168,000. Retailers cut nearly 40,000. Professional and business services got rid of 180,000, with 78,000 jobs lost at temporary-help agencies. Financial companies reduced payrolls by 44,000. Leisure and hospitality firms chopped 33,000 positions.

The few areas spared: education and health services, as well as government, which boosted employment last month.

Disappearing jobs and evaporating wealth from tanking home values, 401(k)s and other investments have forced consumers to retrench, driving companies to lay off workers. It's a vicious cycle in which all the economy's negative problems feed on each other, worsening the downward spiral.

...

The country is getting bloodied by fallout from the housing, credit and financial crises_ the worst since the 1930s. And there's no easy fix for a quick turnaround, economists said.

Obama is counting on a multipronged assault to lift the country out of recession: a $787 billion stimulus package of increased federal spending and tax cuts; a revamped, multibillion-dollar bailout program for the nation's troubled banks; and a $75 billion effort to stem home foreclosures.

Even in the best-case scenario that the relief efforts work and the recession ends later in 2009, the unemployment rate is expected to keep climbing, hitting 9 percent or higher this year. In fact, the Federal Reserve thinks the unemployment rate will stay elevated into 2011. Economists say the job market may not get back to normal — meaning a 5 percent unemployment rate — until 2013.

Businesses won't be inclined to ramp up hiring until they are sure any economic recovery has staying power.

...

Given Friday's grim figures, Gault predicted the economy would probably shrink in the first quarter at a pace of at least 6 percent, and that the unemployment rate will rise as high as 10 percent in the first half of 2010.


And this isn't slamming only the United States, it's affecting nearly every large country in a big way.

I myself recently was knocked from full time, down to ~14 hours a week. Every new job opportunity out there in my field is few and far between, and even then there are 50-200 people to compete against for it. At this rate, I'm going to be bankrupt.

Has this unemployment spiral hit you, or your family? If yes, how badly? What are you doing/going to do to cope?
 

Jason

Awesome Bro

My mams hours at work have been cut down to less than half (From 30 per week to 12), and my dad, who was a builder, has lost his job completely as there's no new work for him to do, so he was laid off.

However, we're still surviving as they recieve child benefits for all four of us kids, and me and my bigger brother can live with our EMA (Education Maintenance Allownace), which is £30 ($40) each week, although I've spent around £300 ($400) on games since Christmas, not including the money I got from Christmas.

I don't really know HOW we're surviving, I mean, we can still afford chinese every saturday, which comes to £40 ($52 ish) for 6 of us.

Unemployment sucks.
 
My dad developed full blown Parkinson's Disease and is no longer allowed to work. My parents pull in about 95k a year, which is crappy in California. My dad received his last paycheck from the Vista school district in February. He's filed for disability, but my parents won't know if they'll be getting it until around late June or early July.

My family and I really don't seem to care. If we lose the house, we can find an apartment for much cheaper in Southern California. It would really suck to move, but there's not much we can do except pray that the government processes his claim early.
 

Jason

Awesome Bro

united washcloth express":c0yv4pgm said:
My dad developed full blown Parkinson's Disease and is no longer allowed to work. My parents pull in about 95k a year, which is crappy in California. My dad received his last paycheck from the Vista school district in February. He's filed for disability, but my parents won't know if they'll be getting it until around late June or early July.

My family and I really don't seem to care. If we lose the house, we can find an apartment for much cheaper in Southern California. It would really suck to move, but there's not much we can do except pray that the government processes his claim early.

95k a year is bad ? Thats around.. £70k, yeah, my family got around £20k a year before my dad was laid off, now we get near enough nothing, my dad had to cancel the car insurance cause he can't afford to be paying it.
 

Vadon

Member

jbrist":rubp1n1q said:
95k a year is bad ? Thats around.. £70k, yeah, my family got around £20k a year before my dad was laid off, now we get near enough nothing, my dad had to cancel the car insurance cause he can't afford to be paying it.

The cost of living. It's not bad, but it's not good either. I imagine the parts that are making the money really painful are medical bills/insurance in addition to paying the mortgage on a house that isn't worth nearly as much as they are paying for as well as car payments and insurance.

Plus things are just generally more expensive in California.

***

We've been hit like most people as well. My father has a multitude of health problems that makes the longterm security of his employment shaky. We were able to take a job in a new state and moved recently. The problem is that our house isn't selling back in the other state. So we're stuck paying a mortgage and other fees on a house we don't live in as well as the rent of another. Because of this our money has been very tight and I've been trying to find a job. Without adequate transportation, however (I had to sell my car before we moved) it's difficult to gain employment. So I'm essentially stuck waiting to establish residency to attend college, while at the same time praying for our house to sell or some of my scholarship applications to pull through. If the house doesn't sell, I'll likely have to bite the bullet and take a student loan out. Something I'd really rather not do because it's nice not to be in debt while learning.
 
I have been trying to get a job to provide for myself for over a year and a half now. It makes me mad when some person gets a job that he/she is not qualified for. I have been working with animals for about seven years, compared to a girl with no experience, just cute and preppy. Guess who gets the job at Petco? Even with food stamps, you can't get those unless you have a job! I think that is the biggest pile of bullshit I have ever heard!
 

Jason

Awesome Bro

Vadon":2cseqrab said:
The cost of living. It's not bad, but it's not good either. I imagine the parts that are making the money really painful are medical bills/insurance in addition to paying the mortgage on a house that isn't worth nearly as much as they are paying for as well as car payments and insurance.

Actually I live in the UK, we have free healthcare, and we don't have to pay the mortgage as our house is around 100 years old, and my grandparents lived here and gave it to my mam as a present when they got their new house, so with the money that should have been spent on the mortgage (Which had already been paid off), has been spent on improving the house itself, which, before this extension that I'm sat in was built, the price of the house raised from £200k to around £230k, which is pretty decent. (This is an upstairs extension by the way)
 
95k is bad? Dude... I don't know where you came from -_-. My parents had a shop, which got bankrupt. So now mom got herself a new job, however our yearly income has shrunk to around 30.000 euro's, which is really low if you have 3 kids, whereas one is going to University, and two are on High School.
 
Hasn't hit me. Being in the military pretty much makes me immuned. I make extremely shitty pay, but my cost of living is very cheap and still at a middle class quality. Normally I pull in about 19.5k a year as a E-3, and since I'm deployed it's about 24k, but on average I spend less then 300 dollars a month for living expenses. That's to include credit card debts and other miscellaneous bills. My college is paid for by the military, and I have 5 years to see how the economy will play before I have to decide whether or not to reenlist. I think I dodged the bullet on the economic crisis.
 
I've been really lucky. My parents both work in the medical industry, which is pretty much the only 100% guaranteed way to not get fired anymore, unless you suck at your job. Still, I have some friends whose parents worked in factories (auto-making) and they got laid off.

I guess living in a small, isolated town helps you to not get affected by the recession very much.
 

$t3v0

Awesome Bro

ME: Self employed and business is booming!
DAD:Still working all over the world making a packet.
MUM:Has owns a hair salon. People still get their hair done.
BROTHER:Brother's Politician. Not really affected.

We're absolutey fantastic! :biggrin:
 

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