The Jobs scandal that no
one is paying attention to: At Least 27 Million Americans 'Underemployed'
While unemployment numbers are of
great concern, the greater concern is the number of underemployed Americans. According
to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the underemployment rate in 2012 was 14.7
percent, amounting to 23.1 million people.
Underemployed
Americans include those who are officially considered unemployed, plus
involuntary part-time workers and "marginally attached" workers —
those who have not looked for work within the last four weeks but have sought a
job within the last year and are available for employment.
About 2.5 million people were marginally attached workers last
year, and 8.1 million were involuntary part-time workers.
As troubling as that may be, the actual
figures are likely much worse, according to a report by Wendell Cox for
NewGeography.com.
For instance, Gallup estimated that
the nation's underemployment rate stood at 17.4 percent in August, meaning that
there are more than 27 million underemployed workers. Also, economists at the Center for College Affordability
and Productivity have estimated that 48 percent of college graduates who are
employed hold jobs that do not require a college degree. These are not
included in the underemployment figures. If they were, the underemployment rate would
soar.
Nevada had the highest underemployment
rate during the year ending on June 30, 19 percent, followed by California with
18.3 percent. The lowest rates were in North Dakota at 6.2 percent and South
Dakota, 7.8 percent.
"The productivity gap that
results from underemployment constrains the U.S. economy at a time of unusually
severe financial challenges,"
observes Cox, visiting professor at the Conservatoire National des Arts et
Metiers in Paris and the author of "War on the Dream: How Anti-Sprawl
Policy Threatens the Quality of Life."
"College graduates face not only
a grim employment market, but have student loan repayments that require good
jobs," he adds. "Yet things
could get worse. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) has a
built-in incentive for employers to shift workers to part-time status" or
to hire part-time workers to avoid the mandate to provide health insurance to
full-time workers.
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