Friday, November 13, 2009
Unemployed!
“What is your job?” “Unemployed!” Imagine having to say that for more than a year. Millions of Americans are in this unenviable position. They are waiting for someone--government, big business, anyone-- to do something so they can have jobs.
No job often means no health care insurance along with many other issues. How do you feel about yourself when you’re unemployed? For many, it leads to serious depression. The latest statistics say that the unemployment rate is now at 10.2%. This is, of course, misleading because it only includes those individuals who are on state unemployment. If you count Federal unemployment payments, people who have stopped looking and those who have taken lesser positions just to put food on the table, the number is more like 21%. These are just numbers, and are not personal. To the people who are out of work, it is very personal! It hurts!
What it all means to me is that we have a lot of hurting Americans. We need to get a jobs program going. For the past month, the Obama administration has become more publicly vocal about the situation and seems to have acknowledged that job creation is now necessary.
Congress for now seems mired in the Health Insurance Plan. It must be very frustrating to be unemployed at this time and listening to advisors and economists saying that this may be a “jobless” recovery. It seems to me that the idea that was broached by President Obama several weeks ago, of a tax credit for small and medium sized businesses for hiring people, makes sense. Doing something for the unemployed makes more sense than just preserving jobs.
My next concern is with the jobs that have been “preserved” with stimulus money that will not be there in the future. Ultimately we need growth! My belief is that if Americans see job creation, a lowering of the unemployment numbers and a drop to below 400,000 in new weekly unemployment numbers, confidence would begin to be restored and we would move forward at a faster rate that in turn would create jobs.
I think the next several weeks will be an important time in finding out about the willingness of consumers to spend money during the holidays. If they spend equal to or greater than last year, we may be headed in the right direction with the economy but not necessarily with jobs.
Ed Mallon
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