For all
the pain caused by the Great Recession, the job market still was not in as bad
shape as it had been during the depths of the early 1980s recession – until
now.
With the
release of the jobs report on Friday, the broadest measure of unemployment and
underemployment tracked by the Labor Department has reached its highest level
in decades. If statistics went back so far, the measure would almost certainly
be at its highest level since the Great Depression.
In all,
more than one out of every six workers – 17.5 percent – were unemployed or
underemployed in October. The previous recorded high was 17.1 percent, in
December 1982.
This
includes the officially unemployed, who have looked for work in the last four
weeks. It also includes discouraged workers, who have looked in the past year,
as well as millions of part–time workers who want to be working full time.
The
official jobless rate – 10.2 percent in October, up from 9.8 percent in
September – remains lower than the early 1980s peak of 10.8 percent.
The rate
is highest today, sometimes 20 percent, in states that had big housing bubbles,
like California and Arizona, or that have large manufacturing sectors, like
Michigan, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island and South Carolina.
The new
benchmark is a sign of just how much damage financial crises tend to inflict.
A recent book by Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff, two economists,
found that over the last century the typical crisis had caused the jobless
rate in the country where it occurred to rise for almost five years. By that
standard, the jobless rate here would continue rising for two more years,
through the end of 2011.
Most
economists predict that the rate will in fact begin to fall next year, largely
because of the federal government’s aggressive response – fiscal stimulus,
interest–rate cuts and a variety of creative steps by the Federal Reserve
and Treasury Department. Friday’s report showed that monthly job losses
continued to slow recently, though the improvement has been gradual.
At the
White House Friday, President Obama signed a bill to extend unemployment
benefits and a tax credit for home buyers, and said that he was looking at
ways to enact more stimulus. On Wednesday, the Fed announced that it expected
to leave its benchmark interest at zero for “an extended period.”
Nearly 16
million people are now unemployed and more than seven million jobs have been
lost since late 2007.
Officially,
the Labor Department’s broad measure of unemployment goes back only to 1994.
But early this year, with the help of economists at the department, The New
York Times created a version that estimates it going back to 1970. If such a
measure were available for the Depression, it probably would have exceeded 30
percent.
Compared
with the early 1980s, a smaller share of workers today are officially
unemployed and a smaller share are considered discouraged workers.
But there
are many more people who would like to be working full time and have been able
to find only part–time work, according to the government’s monthly survey
of workers. The rapid increase in their ranks and in the officially unemployed
has caused the rate to rise much faster in this recession than in the early
1980s. Two years ago, it was only 8.2 percent.
One of the
more striking aspects of the Great Recession is that most of its impact has
fallen on a relatively narrow group of workers. This is evident primarily in
two ways.
First, the
number of people who have experienced any unemployment is surprisingly low,
given the severity of the recession. The pace of layoffs has increased, but
the peak layoff rate this year was the same as it was during the 2001
recession, which was a fairly mild downturn. The main reason that the
unemployment rate has soared is the hiring rate has plummeted.
So fewer
workers than might be expected have lost their jobs. But those without work
are paying a steep price, because finding a new job is extremely difficult.
Second,
wages have continued to rise for most people who still have jobs. The average
hourly wage for rank–and–file workers, who make up about four–fifths of
the work force, actually accelerated in October, according to the new report.
Even
though some companies have cut the pay of workers, the average hourly wage has
still risen 1.5 to 2.5 percent over the last year, depending on which
government survey is examined. Average weekly pay has risen less – zero to 1
percent – because hours have been cut. But average prices have fallen.
Altogether, the typical worker has received a 1 to 2 percent inflation–adjusted
raise over the last year.
In the
other two severe recessions in recent decades, workers with jobs fared
considerably worse. At the same point in the mid–1970s downturn, real weekly
pay had fallen 7 percent; in the early 1980s recession, it had fallen 4
percent.
It is a
strange combination: workers who still have a job are doing better than in
other deep recessions, but the unemployment and underemployment have risen to
their highest level since the Depression.