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Corrupt Government Title: The 'big lie' behind the rosy unemployment rate When Donald Trump on Monday questioned the accuracy of the federal governments glowing employment reports, it may have seemed like another unsubstantiated outburst from a famously loose-with-the-facts candidate. But in this case, he was joining a bipartisan chorus of businesspeople, economists and lawmakers who say the monthly employment report is an artificial portrait deliberately airbrushed by statisticians to make the jobs picture look better than it really is. Last week, the Obama administrations Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that the economy added 255,000 jobs in July, and that the official unemployment rate had remained at 4.9 percentthe lowest it has been since early 2008. In a speech to the Detroit Economic Club, Trump derided the report, calling it one of the biggest hoaxes in modern politics. Though Trump didnt say so, the larger criticism of the unemployment rate revolves around how it countsand doesnt countthe jobless. Today, the official unemployment rate counts only those actively seeking a job. It doesnt count those who have dropped out of the official labor force either because they have not been able to find a job, or because they are working part-time and cannot find full-time employment. In todays labor market, the unemployment rate drastically understates the weakness of job opportunities, wrote the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute on its website, which calls for a more comprehensive unemployment rate. This is due to the existence of a large pool of missing workers potential workers who, because of weak job opportunities, are neither employed nor actively seeking a job. In other words, these are people who would be either working or looking for work if job opportunities were significantly stronger. Because jobless workers are only counted as unemployed if they are actively seeking work, these missing workers are not reflected in the unemployment rate. The group argues that there are now 2.3 million missing workersa number that, if counted by BLS, would bump the official unemployment rate up to 6.2 percent. Others such as private equity executive Leo Hindery argue that even that figure grossly understates unemployment in America. A longtime Democratic Party economic adviser and fundraiser, Hindery has since 2006 published a monthly email to lawmakers, congressional staff and activists that compiles data from BLS and the Census Bureau and then adjusts to arrive at what he says is a more accurate view of the unemployment situation. In his latest dispatch, Hindery points out that there are 2 million so-called marginally attached workers, which BLS defines as those who were not in the labor force, wanted and were available for work, and had looked for a job sometime in the prior 12 months. There were also another 5.9 million part time of necessity workersthose he says are unable to find full-time jobs or whove had their hours cut back. If those workers were counted, the official unemployment rate would be 9.7 percent, as BLS itself acknowledges. Add another 4.3 million who say they want work but havent sought employment, and Hindery says the real unemployment rate in America is 12.1 percent. That figure, he says, tracks a relatively recent trend in which there are as many uncounted unemployed or underemployed workers as those counted in the official unemployment figure. The difference between the real and official unemployment rate had for years after the second World War never been more than about 30 percent, even in recessions, he said. So if your official unemployment rate was 5 percent, in real terms it might be, say, 7 percent, which isnt great, but wont kill your economy. What happened in the two-year lead up to the 2007 recession, though, is that for the first time the ratio went to 1-to-1 so if your unemployment rate was 7 to 8 percent, it was really 14 to 16 percent. And thats a huge change. 'Pact With The Devil' Trumps criticism of the latest job report quickly politicized employment statistics, but that's nothing new. Hindery, for instance, asserted that the current method of counting the jobless was a political decision made by both political parties right after World War II. Both parties sat down and basically said if we ever tell the American people the truth about the employment rate, things could get ugly for whichever one of us is in power, he said. So they made a pact between themselves and with the devil to not count everyone. In more recent times, the tabulation of employment statistics has changedand has been a source of political controversy. In 1994, for instance, federal officials revised the way it counted discouraged workers those who want to work but have given up looking. In a research paper about the change, one BLS official noted that, The number of discouraged workers was much smaller after the 1994 redesign because the definition for the group was tightened. In late 2002amid a recessionPresident George W. Bushs administration discontinued the Labor Departments mass layoff report, prompting Democrats to accuse the White House of suppressing negative economic news. Democrats managed to restore the regular report for a decade, but it was eliminated again in 2013 by the Obama administration as part of a budget-cutting sequestration agreement with congressional Republicans. With President Obama championing the controversial Trans-Pacific Partnership, the budget deal also followed through on the Obama administrations previous proposal to cut a BLS unit that helped track the job-loss effects of trade deals. Two years after that agreement, 19 House Republicans co-sponsored legislation called the Real Unemployment Calculation Act that would mandate the federal government include more jobless workers in its official unemployment rate. In doing so, it would address what Gallup CEO Jim Clifton has said is the big problem with the current rate. There's no other way to say this, he wrote. The official unemployment rate, which cruelly overlooks the suffering of the long-term and often permanently unemployed as well as the depressingly underemployed, amounts to a big lie. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
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In late 2002amid a recessionPresident George W. Bushs administration discontinued the Labor Departments mass layoff report, prompting Democrats to accuse the White House of suppressing negative economic news. Democrats managed to restore the regular report for a decade, but it was eliminated again in 2013 by the Obama administration as part of a budget-cutting sequestration agreement with congressional Republicans. With President Obama championing the controversial Trans-Pacific Partnership, the budget deal also followed through on the Obama administrations previous proposal to cut a BLS unit that helped track the job-loss effects of trade deals. Two years after that agreement, 19 House Republicans co-sponsored legislation called the Real Unemployment Calculation Act that would mandate the federal government include more jobless workers in its official unemployment rate. In doing so, it would address what Gallup CEO Jim Clifton has said is the big problem with the current rate. It would be nice if they just told the truth but its really up to the MSM to step in and do its job. Well at least act like they are trying to do their job. What this tells me is that the old guard needs to die a horrible death and out of the ashes maybe some new more honest blood can take over but even that scares me with the progressive slant of people today.
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