Americans Continue To Opt Out Of The Workforce | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the The Daily Wire. The author of this post is Ben Zeisloft.

    As unemployment remained at low levels in June, the portion of American adults participating in the job market remains far below pre-recession levels, according to a Friday news release from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    Unemployment remained at 3.6% for the fourth month in a row - approximately the same as February 2020, the month before COVID began spreading rapidly through the United States, according to the agency. The unemployment rate has therefore improved significantly from the 14.7% level seen in April 2020.

    Yet the labor force participation rate - the percentage of people who either have a job or are actively looking for one - has not recovered since the recession. The metric dropped from 66% in 2008 to 63% in 2020, then fell another 3% between February 2020 and April 2020 alone as COVID led to government lockdowns and business closures. Men, in particular, have seen a gradual disengagement from the labor force since the end of World War II.

    As of June 2022, labor force participation is 62.2% - a slight decline from the 63.3% level seen in May 2022, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    "There are 755,000 fewer Americans employed today than prior to the pandemic, even as the population age 16 and over has increased by 4.2 million," Heritage Foundation research fellow and former U.S. Joint Economic Committee senior economist Rachel Greszler said in a statement provided to The Daily Wire. "This has caused massive struggles for employers and is directly contributing to inflation, as employers have to pay workers more to do the exact same work they were doing before. Yet, even as average earnings are up $3,100 over the past year, the average worker is $1,800 poorer after factoring in a $5,100 inflation tax."

    In 2020, median household income in the United States was roughly $67,500, according to the U.S. Census Bureau - meaning that a $1,800 effective pay cut constitutes a 2.7% decline in the typical household's earnings. Inflationary pressures have forced some Americans into unretirement, according to job platform Indeed, which recently noted that roughly 3.2% of workers who were retired a year earlier are now employed once again.

    Federal COVID stimulus, however, appeared to hamper labor market recovery, thereby worsening inflationary pressures. In March 2021, President Joe Biden enacted the American Rescue Plan - a $1.9 trillion package that extended the $300 weekly bonus unemployment benefits first passed under President Donald Trump through September 2021. Within a few months, half of American governors prematurely opted out of the extension.

    A paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research confirmed that states which left the program saw "the flow of unemployed workers into employment" increase by two-thirds.

    "When it comes to maximizing employment," Greszler continued, "the unintended consequences of many COVID-19 policies and federal interventions in the workforce demonstrate that while the temptation for policymakers is always to do more, the best way to increase employment is to abandon attempts to expand the government's influence over people's lives."

    Republicans on the Joint Economic Committee noted last year that only 12% of "inactive, prime-age, able-bodied men" desire a job or are open to work. Government welfare programs often disincentivize labor force participation for the demographic.

    "Easing the labor shortage and alleviating inflation requires creating an environment in which more Americans want to pursue work and are able to maximize their productive capabilities," Greszler added.

poll#154
Inarguably, the policies of the Democrats in congress and Joe Biden as the Executive is plunging the United States into a recession, if we are not already there; a recession that was completely avoidable. Will abrupt changes in policies occur in time?
  Yes, the Democrats have a bold plan, yet to be revealed, to save us.
  No, there will have to be a complete undoing of the damage done by these Democrats.
  I can't do simple math, so how am I to understand the concept of basic economics.
1,216 total vote(s)     What's your Opinion?

Go Back

HbAD0

Latest Regional Business

WASHINGTON, NC— The Beaufort County Community College Foundation received a $40,000 donation from the First Annual Belhaven Trout Tournament and Festival.
Coming on the heels of a second-quarter report that saw losses of $526.7 million, VinFast reported Thursday that it lost an additional $623 million for the third quarter of 2023.
Charlotte has joined a list of major US cities who recently placed a formal bid to designate the Queen City as a nationally recognized regional tech hub.
As North Carolina is America’s ninth most populous state, film and television producers are working with the Tarheel State in mind.
Beaufort County officials on Thursday helped the Beaufort County Committee of 100 welcome renowned e-commerce, digital marketing, and consulting firm BTW Global, LLC to its new headquarters in Washington.
Disney plans to eliminate thousands of jobs next week, dismissing as many as 15% of entertainment staffers, according to a recent report from Bloomberg.

HbAD1

Neuralink founder Elon Musk said he hopes implanting wireless brain-computer chips in humans will play a role in the existential risk of population reduction posed by artificial intelligence.
Ford announced on Monday that it is pausing construction on a multi-billion dollar battery plant in Marshall, Michigan that had drawn scrutiny from U.S. lawmakers over the company’s partnership with Chinese battery-maker Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd., or CATL.
On Tuesday, for the second year in a row, North Carolina earned the top spot in CNBC’s annual “America’s Top States for Business” rankings out of all 50 states.
North Carolina is one of six southern states that, together, have become an economic powerhouse, overtaking the once dominant Northeast region of the United States. That’s according to a new analysis from Bloomberg.
North Carolina is set to receive over $1.53 billion in federal funding to help with expanding high-speed internet across the state. The U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) made the announcement Monday.

HbAD2

It’s not just young people who are getting screwed by the current economy.

HbAD3

 
Back to Top