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Is High Unemployment Recession-Proof?

By Dan Fastenberg , Posted Jun 24th 2011 @ 1:48PM

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High Unemployment The direct correlation between unemployment and the great recession may be less than meets the eye, or is commonly perceived, so says a new report.

The cause of the near-doubling of national employment in the wake of the financial crisis (from 5.8 percent at the end of 2008 to 9.6 percent at the end of 2010) may in fact have roughly as much to do with structural factors as it does with cyclical factors, argues a new working paper put out by the International Monetary Fund. The paper, entitled, "New Evidence on Cyclical and Structural Sources of Unemployment," was put together by IMF economists Jinzhu Chen, Prakash Kannan, Prakash Loungani and Bharat Trehan.

"For U.S. long-term unemployment the split between cyclical and structural factors is closer to 60-40, including during the Great Recession," the paper puts it plainly in the introduction. Much of the paper is devoted to explaining why a final end to the recession -- a cyclical change -- might not necessarily lead to a quick uptick in employment.

The thinking is centered on the structural problem of the American workforce's "mismatch" with the skills in demand. As the authors of the study put it, the proof is in the "considerable heterogeneity in unemployment outcomes" by sector, with the construction industry and its 16 percent long-term unemployment rate used as an example. The distinction between the categories is not simplistic, and the authors do note, "the severity and persistence of output declines during the Great Recession are clearly the dominant factor in pushing up U.S. unemployment.

And while the above argument is not entirely new, what is fresh is the extent to which structural unemployment is at play in the nation's labor woes. The paper's findings suggest that structural unemployment is at or around 8 percent, higher than the previously accepted rate of 6 percent for the prior few decades. The figure not only spells trouble for America's struggling workforce, but also presents a potential argument against further stimulus: Throwing water on an eternal flame won't do much. (Such a conclusion is complicated in the event funds are used for retraining purposes, as opposed to rejuvenating existing, but struggling, sectors and their workers, as was pointed out on a post on Time Magazine's Curious Capitalist blog written by Stephen Gandel.)

The paper's findings go against a school of thought vociferously defended by economist Paul Krugman, which says the problems have everything to do with hiring policies and the swings of the market.

"All the facts suggest that high unemployment in America is the result of inadequate demand -- full stop," Krugman is cited as saying in the paper.

The IMF paper is sure to reignite the debate over how best to help get Americans back to work, which should be expected to dominate the agenda in the next presidential election.


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Dan Fastenberg

Dan Fastenberg

Dan Fastenberg has more than a decade of experience working as a journalist. Most recently he was a reporter with TIME Magazine covering politics with analyst Mark Halperin. Previously, he was a writer for the Thomson Reuters news service's Latin America desk. He was also a reporter and associate editor for the Buenos Aires Herald while living in South America. Follow Dan on Twitter.

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Welcome Vic!

For unemployment, the recession was just the straw that broke the camels back. The jobs have been leaveing in record numbers since Reagan was in the white house and the illegals have been pouring in since the Reagan amnesty but specialy during 2000 to 2008 so mass unemployment was coming regardless of the economy and the jobs are still leaveing . That's why the economy is getting better for some but unemployment is getting worse.

June 27 2011 at 1:42 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
abonable

If they sent back all of the illegal aliens, all americans, if they wanted to work, would have a job.

June 27 2011 at 12:40 PM Report abuse +1 rate up rate down Reply
ruthsgardens

When a recession hits,what does a company do? That's right,they lay off jobs.Then what do they do?That's right.They split up the work of the laid off worker and divide it up amongst the remaining workers.Do you get paid more? Hell no.When the economy picks up, do you get paid more or does the company rehire the laid off people back?Hell no they don't. Management has been trying to cut wages and jobs and now the recession gives them an excuse.It isn't until management loses out making quotas that they rehire the laid off.Why do you think workers unionize?Because they have heard the same crap from every company in america saying they don't have or are losing money.When american workers unionize,they enter a collective bargaining agreement.Their books are opened.If the money is not there the union cannot ask for more.If it is they negotiate.If the unions feel the books are fixed,it can go to court.If it is found not fixed the union has to pay reparations.What the government has to put an end to is corporations paying workers wages,pensions and benefits out of credit allowing a company to go bankrupt and the workers lose everything.That is union and non-union.

June 27 2011 at 11:42 AM Report abuse +1 rate up rate down Reply
Welcome Vic!

Since our leaders have determined that we're going to continue to sit on our butts and take it like we have the last 30 years I don't see anything short of marching on capital hill and making some noise and let the world know how the hipocrits in Washington, that call for human rights in other countries, treat there own people, but we need financeing and organizers and a date with a permit. Everybody that was here in the 60's and 70;s , we need to go back to the mall and this time bring your kids. It's time

June 27 2011 at 10:59 AM Report abuse +2 rate up rate down Reply
Welcome Vic!

Unfortunately , with the destruction of the union labor movement in this country, there's nobody left with enough money and power to lobby against the corporations and that's exactly where Reagan and the right wanted us. Reagan ex-liberal union organizer turned neo-nazi once he made it to the white house which makes me wonder if he was in the corporations pocket long before he ran for presidentand even though most US labor was non-union, they still benefited when the unions made strides in wages and benefits.

June 27 2011 at 10:41 AM Report abuse +2 rate up rate down Reply
bearseas

All these "Thinkers" are not finding the real cause to the problems we have....let me help.....in one word.....the problem is GOVERNMENT. Your welcome.

June 27 2011 at 6:01 AM Report abuse +3 rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to bearseas's comment
HiRoader

CORRECTION!!!... The problem is "LOBBIED" government...

June 27 2011 at 7:41 AM Report abuse +2 rate up rate down Reply
wayne

stop NAFTA

June 27 2011 at 2:24 AM Report abuse +2 rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to wayne's comment
HiRoader

@ Wayne NAFTA..., never worked.., 15 million "illegals" as mortal lock proof...

June 27 2011 at 7:48 AM Report abuse +2 rate up rate down Reply
Welcome Vic!

There is a recovery but not if you're working class or lower middle class. Our good paying jobs left the country in record numbers from 2000 to 2008 and they're not coming back, it has nothing to do with the economic recovery. If you were in manufactureing, service or tech support your jobs are in India or China or south of the border. If you were in construction chances are some guy from ElSalvador or Guatamala or Mexico has your job. You can't outsource millions of jobs to Asia and South America and import 30 million illegal workers and still have enough good paying jobs for everybody. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure that out. That's why nobody does anything about unemployment. The Democrats don't want to make the illegals mad because they need their votes. The Republicans don't want to make the coprorations mad because they need their money.So if you were making 25.00 an hour a few years ago and now you're making 7.50 mopping floors in a walmart get used to it

June 27 2011 at 12:22 AM Report abuse +9 rate up rate down Reply
silver

I was let go because company had to make more money. Greed is a very bad thing..It does not effect only workers but their families.Now I am overseas hoping to find wprk because I lost everything after 30 year of hard work..I eat one meal a day, and hoping to come back home and get a job again. When I hear unemployed are lazy, I want to cry. If I could find job, I would work 3 jobs. I am not lazy, I am middle aged, although have strong experience, being mature is the main reason not to get hired. Please people, lets help eachother whatever we can..Many in the same situation and it is hard..

June 27 2011 at 12:07 AM Report abuse +8 rate up rate down Reply
surffmaster

Did anybody proofread this mess of stupidity before posting it. Read the damn first paragraph aNd engage your brain.

June 26 2011 at 11:44 PM Report abuse +2 rate up rate down Reply
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