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View Full Version : The unemployment timebomb is quietly ticking



xav
07-06-2009, 05:05 PM
One dog has yet to bark in this long winding crisis. Beyond riots in Athens and a Baltic bust-up, we have not seen evidence of bitter political protest as the slump eats away at the legitimacy of governing elites in North America, Europe, and Japan. It may just be a matter of time.

One of my odd experiences covering the US in the early 1990s was visiting militia groups that sprang up in Texas, Idaho, and Ohio in the aftermath of recession. These were mostly blue-collar workers, – early victims of global "labour arbitrage" – angry enough with Washington to spend weekends in fatigues with M16 rifles. Most backed protest candidate Ross Perot, who won 19pc of the presidential vote in 1992 with talk of shutting trade with Mexico.

The inchoate protest dissipated once recovery fed through to jobs, although one fringe group blew up the Oklahoma City Federal Building in 1995. Unfortunately, there will be no such jobs this time. Capacity use has fallen to record-low levels (68pc in the US, 71 in the eurozone). A deep purge of labour is yet to come.

The shocker last week was not just that the US lost 467,000 jobs in May, but also that time worked fell 6.9pc from a year earlier, dropping to 33 hours a week. "At no time in the 1990 or 2001 recessions did we ever come close to seeing such a detonating jobs figure," said David Rosenberg from Glukin Sheff. "We have lost a record nine million full-time jobs this cycle."

Earnings have fallen at a 1.6pc annual rate over the last three months. Wage deflation is setting in – like Japan. Interestingly, The International Labour Organisation is worried enough to push for a global pact, fearing countries may set off a ruinous spiral by chipping away at wages try to gain beggar-thy-neighbour advantage.

Some of the US pay cuts are disguised. Over 238,000 state workers in California have been working two days less a month without pay since February. Variants of this are happening in 22 states.

The Centre for Labour Market Studies (CLMS) in Boston says US unemployment is now 18.2pc, counting the old-fashioned way. The reason why this does not "feel" like the 1930s is that we tend to compress the chronology of the Depression. It takes time for people to deplete their savings and sink into destitution. Perhaps our greater cushion of wealth today will prevent another Grapes of Wrath, but 20m US homeowners are already in negative equity (zillow.com data). Evictions are running at a terrifying pace.

Some 342,000 homes were foreclosed in April, pushing a small army of children into a network of charity shelters. This compares to 273,000 homes lost in the entire year of 1932. Sheriffs in Michigan and Illinois are quietly refusing to toss families on to the streets, like the non-compliance of Catholic police in the Slump.

Europe is a year or so behind, but catching up fast. Unemployment has reached 18.7pc in Spain (37pc for youths), and 16.3pc in Latvia. Germany has delayed the cliff-edge effect by paying companies to keep furloughed workers through "Kurzarbeit". Germany's "Wise Men" fear that the jobless rate will jump from 3.7m to 5.1m by next year. The OECD expects unemployment to reach 57m in the rich countries by the end of next year.

This is the deadly lag effect. What is so disturbing is that governments have not even begun the spending squeeze that must come to stop their countries spiralling into a debt compound trap.

French president Nicolas Sarkozy, with a good nose for popular moods, says: "We must overhaul everything. We cannot have a system of rentiers and social dumping under globalisation. Either we have justice or we will have violence. It is a chimera to think that this crisis is just a footnote and that we can carry on as before."

The message has not reached Wall Street or the City. If bankers know what is good for them, they will take a teacher's salary for a few years until the storm passes. If they proceed with the bonuses now on the table, even as taxpayers pay for the errors of their caste, they must expect a ferocious backlash.

We are fortunate that the US has a new president enjoying a great reservoir of sympathy, and a clean-broom Congress. Other nations must limp on with carcass governments: Germany's paralysed Left-Right coalition, the burned-out relics of Japan's LDP, and Labour's death march in Britain. Some are taking precautions: Silvio Berlusconi is trying to emasculate Italy's parliament (with little protest) while the Kremlin has activated "anti-crisis" units to nip protest in the bud.

We are moving into Phase II of the Great Unwinding. It may be time to put away our texts of Keynes, Friedman, and Fisher, so useful for Phase 1, and start studying what happened to society when global unemployment went haywire in 1932.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/5742937/The-unemployment-timebomb-is-quietly-ticking.html

brainplay
07-06-2009, 05:13 PM
The message has not reached Wall Street or the City. If bankers know what is good for them, they will take a teacher's salary for a few years until the storm passes. If they proceed with the bonuses now on the table, even as taxpayers pay for the errors of their caste, they must expect a ferocious backlash.

They still refuse to see the corporate bonus system similar to the "tip" system for waiters. You can't remove them without revamping entire contracts and pay systems. You can reduce to the minimum allowed by contract for poor performance but thats it.


We are fortunate that the US has a new president enjoying a great reservoir of sympathy, and a clean-broom Congress.

WTF?!

xav
07-06-2009, 05:22 PM
clean-broom Congress.

must be some kind of anglo saxon expression

brainplay
07-06-2009, 05:36 PM
must be some kind of anglo saxon expression

Clean broom = clean sweep. In other words, a Congress that will clean up all of the bad stuff.

Thats what left me scratching my head.

CG51
07-06-2009, 05:44 PM
Wait till September when the stimulus for unemployment compensation starts to run out. Unless this administration has another stimulus package for unemployment compensation then tens of thousands may be left with no source of income after this summer.

No money to be spent on buying sh!t we don't need, the life blood of the American economy; consumption.

Chimera
07-06-2009, 05:58 PM
No money to be spent on buying sh!t we don't need, the life blood of the American economy; consumption.

The unemployed people in my relative are stuggling to buy decent food at the supermarket. I don't think unemployed poeple recently fired in the US enjoy their free time buying PS3, iPhones and the latest shiit from Best Buy, do they?

Flagg
07-06-2009, 06:45 PM
If you are looking for unemployment stats not produced by government have a look at shadowstats.com

Kilgor
07-06-2009, 06:52 PM
^ the US government has been changing the accounting rules and producing different figures to give a more optimistic number. The fundamentals still stay the same.

deagle
07-06-2009, 06:58 PM
why do all them corrupt ceo's still have jobs while the real hard-working ones don't ?

its not true to all situations, but just look at the headlines.

CG51
07-06-2009, 07:33 PM
The unemployed people in my relative are stuggling to buy decent food at the supermarket. I don't think unemployed poeple recently fired in the US enjoy their free time buying PS3, iPhones and the latest shiit from Best Buy, do they?

No, most are just trying to pay the bills, you know, buying that $200,000.00 home with a variable mortgage while they were employed with Wal mart and such. Now that five years have past, mortgages for those homes around here have gone from approx $1200.00 per month to around $2000.00 per month. And that is not considering the ones that took out second mortgages to pay for toys. Many unemployed are losing their homes and some are just walking away because that is the cheapest way out. Now the government is bailing them out due to poor planing. People wanting that champagne life on kool-aid wage. Thing will get worse here before they get better.

NUCKINFUTS
07-06-2009, 09:20 PM
Even McDonald's won't hire me.

vryhpyammoadded
07-06-2009, 11:04 PM
We are fortunate that the US has a new president enjoying a great reservoir of sympathy
Yeh, but how long can the current government shill, along with all his buddies on the Hill, continue to buy off the good graces of people? I mean the scams just can’t go on much longer, the marks are getting wise you see. Then again, many didn’t understand much of the threat of the multi trillion Cap and Trade enslavement judging by the media love fest response and the Pakleds I'm surrounded by.

and a clean-broom Congress.
Hahhahahaha.. Oh that was a good laugh. This Congress is reaching levels of corruption comparable to many of its previous heights, maybe more.
Like I said before the election, SAME you can believe in.

Still, he got a few things right, the wealthy swimming in undisclosed executive benefits should best take note what happened to French Royalty during the terror and the current crop of bad political egg heads should dump big government or run for the hills because they’ll be next on the revenge list when it all goes to sh*t in a couple of years. Well, unless a war bails them all out.

cmill
07-06-2009, 11:08 PM
Even McDonald's won't hire me.

That's because you'e NUCKINFUTS!! p-)

Lt-Col A. Tack
07-06-2009, 11:20 PM
Interesting articles tonight, Xav
Thanks for posting.

Dan2004
07-06-2009, 11:32 PM
........Well, unless a war bails them all out.

Unfortunately for the rest of us, One probably will. :-(

Pay no attention to the sh*t going on over here, there be terrorists this way that need killin..../sarcasm

Chulo
07-07-2009, 05:02 PM
maybe Obama can do more of this "Jobs saved" math and ward of unemployment