Every year, on the first Monday in September, we celebrate a holiday called Labor Day. There isn’t a consensus as to when the first Labor Day was observed or even who first came up with the idea; the first incarnations were enacted by municipal and state governments. It became a national holiday in 1894, during the Grover Cleveland administration, says Wikipedia, “to placate unionists following the Pullman Strike” where thousands of US Marshalls and US Army troops were mobilized by the federal government to put an end to it. Today, as it says on the US Department of Labor’s website, we “pay tribute on Labor Day to…the American worker”.
However, without jobs, there is no American worker. No matter what you hear or read in the media, we are not in an economic recovery. While the stock market is levitating because of economic stimulus provided by the Federal Reserve Bank through Quantitative Easing, the real economy is struggling. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the job market.
There are many causes for concern. According to the Bureau of Labor statistics, wages have stagnated over the last couple years as has hours worked. But the real story has to do with part time vs. full time employment. The trend is showing a shift toward a part time worker society. In June alone, 360,000 part time jobs were created while the number of full time jobs dropped by a whopping 240,000. Obamacare, with its more than 15,000 pages of new regulations, and its requirement that employers with more than 50 workers provide health care benefits to those working 30 hours a week or more, has been cited as a potential catalyst for this.
Another cause for concern is the work force participation rate, which in June came in at 63.3%, a level not seen since 1979. There are over 1.5 million fewer jobs in the economy today than there were in January of 2009 and about the same number as there were in 2001 when the population was lower by more than 33 million. While the headline unemployment rate has come down, this is because there are fewer people in the work force. According to Keith Hall, former head of the BLS, if the work force was accurately gauged the unemployment rate would be 3 percentage points higher. Economist John Williams estimates that the real unemployment rate is 23.3%.
Still another cause for concern is that of demographics. Labor force participation rates are highest among those aged 55 to 69 years of age, with that age group actually gaining jobs. Many workers in this age group are staying in the work force because they are not financially prepared for retirement. This is forcing younger workers out of the job market.
Here in West Virginia, the workforce participation is the lowest in the nation 54.4%. In a report published in September of last year by the left leaning West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy and funded in part by labor unions, including SEIU, there was reference made to our state’s “job deficit”, which it put at approximately 27,000 jobs, in order to get back to pre-recession levels. The report, entitled The State of Working West Virginia 2012 included some interesting information. The 16-24 year old demographic is only 15% of the state workforce, but it comprises one third of those without jobs. While that group is dropping out of the workforce, older workers, comprising 25% are staying in, which is similar to what is happening nationally. Also worth noting, the public sector (government) is our state’s largest employer, and accounts for one out of every 5 jobs. The sector that placed third is education and health care services, which is heavily subsidized by government. The two sectors combined total 36.4% of all jobs in West Virginia, or more than one out of every three. This is a big reason for why state’s economy chronically underperforms.
Last week there was an article in the State Journal by Jim Ross reporting on the July unemployment data released by the organization Workforce West Virginia. The year over year data from July 2012 to July 2013 showed little change in the number of employed, even though the unemployment rate dropped from 7.4% to 6.2%. 10,000 people mysteriously disappeared from the workforce.
This Labor Day as we fire up the barbeque and anticipate the coming of autumn, we might take time to reflect on our incredible shrinking work force. As jobs continue to disappear, we should consider the policy makers and legislators that have brought us to this point. Perhaps they need to leave the work force for a while.
Elliot Simon
I'm a retired executive and consultant. My wife and I have lived up on the mountain outside of Harpers Ferry since 2002. We have six cats. It would be nice if we could all agree on everything, but lately we... [More...]
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