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Americas 2009 High Unemployment Rates
US Economy September 2009 - America is in a bad, very bad employment landscape since the our Great Depression. It's troubling not simply for its sheer scale but also because the labor market, shaped by globalization and technology and financial meltdown, may be fundamentally different from anything we've seen before.
And if the result is that we're stuck with persistent 9%-to-11% unemployment for a while - a range whose mathematical congruence with that other 9/11 is impossible to miss - we may be looking at a problem that will define the first term of Barack Obama's presidency the way the original 9/11 defined George W. Bush's. Like that 9/11, this one demands a careful refiguring of some of the most basic tenets of national policy.
And just as the shock of Sept. 11 prompted long-overdue (and still not cemented) reforms in intelligence and defense, the jobs crisis will force us to examine a climate that has been deteriorating for years. The total number of nonfarm jobs in the U.S. economy is about the same now - roughly 131 million - as it was in 1999. And the Federal Reserve is predicting moderate growth at best. That means more than a decade without real employment expansion.
We're a long way from Hoovervilles, of course. But it's not hard to imagine, if we're not careful, a country sprouting listless Obamavilles: idled workers minivanning aimlessly through overleveraged cul-de-sacs with no way to pay their mortgages, no health care, little hope of meaningful work and only the hot comfort of angry politics.
Ahorre September 11, 2009 12:28 PM Franquicia de Servicios de Limpieza | Comprar Casas | Vender Casas | Garantia de Prestamos | La Puntuación de Crédito | Robo de Identidad | Prestamos Hipotecarios | Rescate de Ejecución Hipotecaria | Credito - Finanzas - Negocios - Seguros - Deportes - Prestamos