It's not debatable - the job market just went down to its lowest level in 30 years. Government numbers.Ian wrote:Well, what did the "adjusted" employment numbers look like earlier, when the official ones were even worse? And by the way - government employment is way down from three years ago. Not to mention what the bastards in Congress have done to our pay. So that's hardly something that's buoying the employment numbers. As for record numbers leaving the job market, that's quite debateable. Plenty of people left a while ago. But how many have returned, now that hiring is way up?
I didn't say foreclosures were the highest ever.Ian wrote:
As for the "worst year in housing history" - perhaps you haven't noticed that foreclosure rates are way down! So that statement is just not correct. 2009 and 2010 were worse.
2011 Worst Ever for Sales: http://bestplaces.nydailynews.com/stori ... ever-sales
There were 1.9 million foreclosures in 2011. http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/h ... 52512364/1
The basic gist is that banks put an artificial halt on foreclosures. Nothing has really gotten better.The firm cautioned that the decline does not necessarily indicate the housing market is getting better, as many foreclosures have been delayed due to confusion over documentation and legal issues involved in the process.
There have also been problems with the way some lenders were handling foreclosures. Specifically, they have been signing off on home foreclosures without first verifying documents — a practice referred to as "robo-signing." Many of the largest U.S. banks reacted by temporarily stopping all foreclosures, re-filing previously filed foreclosure cases and revisiting pending cases to prevent errors.
Certainly not "undeniable." At best the parts of the economy you've cited as recovering are anemic and paltry.Ian wrote:
Granted, the stock market alone does not the economy make. Neither does the unemployment numbers. Neither does the housing market, or the manufacturing sector, or the inflation rate, or consumer confidence, et cetera...
But I'm only looking at the macro and the trend lines. There is undeniable recovery, there has been growth more than 2.5 years, and it appears to be accelerating.
The only economic "shoe" I'm genuinely worried about is Europe.
Foreclosures are a possible shoe. Housing sales are the worst EVER, and the only hope is that 2012 will be an improvement. I HOPE we hit bottom in 2012 - in fact, I'm banking on it, because I'm buying again this year.
If you really want "big picture" check out this article: http://www.propublica.org/article/our-s ... he-numbers
Here's a brief overview of some key stats on where the economy stands.
Annual rate at which the GDP grew this year: 1.3 percent between April and June, 0.4 percent between January and March
Average annual GDP growth from 1998-2007: 3.02 percent
Total jobs lost since January 2008: 8.7 million
Total jobs recovered since January 2008: 1.8 million
Recession technically ended: over two years ago, in June 2009
Unemployment rate in July 2011: 9.1 percent
The "natural unemployment rate": 5 percent
Months that the unemployment rate has been around 9 percent or more: 28
Number of unemployed people in July 2011: 13.9 million
Number of long-term unemployed people in June 2011: 6.3 million, or 44.4 percent of the unemployed
Number of long-term unemployed people in July 2011: 6.2 million, still about 44.4 percent of the unemployed
Government jobs cut in July, federal, state, and local: 37,000
Pace at which jobs were added throughout the late 1990s: 350,000 per month
Jobs that the Bureau of Labor Statistics initially reported were added in June: 18,000
Jobs that were added in July: 117,000
Percentage of the population that’s employed as of July: 58.2%
Percentage of the population that was employed at the end of the recession in June 2009: 59.4%
Jobs the U.S. needs to create to 5 percent unemployment rate: 6.8 million, as of January 2011
Years it will take to get back to an unemployment rate of 5 percent: four years if we're adding jobs at 350,000 per month; 11 years if we're adding jobs at the 2005 rate of 210,000 per month
Unemployed workers per job opening: 4.64 as of May 2011, the most recent month for which data on job openings was collected (3.0 million job openings in May 2011; unemployed people in May 2011: 13,914,000)
Number of people who weren't in the labor force, but wanted work, as of June 2011: 2.7 million
The last time the labor force participation rate was lower than it is now: 1984
The amount of state budget spending that comes from the federal government: about 1/3, or $478 billion in 2010
Increase in before-tax corporate profits in the first quarter of 2011: $140.3 billion
Percentage of Americans' total personal income that comes from federal funds: almost 20 percent
Spending cuts in the proposed budget: at least $2.3 trillion over a decade from 2012-2021
How long you can currently receive unemployment benefits: up to 99 weeks
The number of those weeks funded to some extent by federal aid: up to 73
People currently relying on federal unemployment benefits: 3.8 million
How long you'll be able to receive unemployment benefits if you lose your job after July 1, 2011: 20 to 26 weeks, depending on your state
Recovery-funded jobs reported by recipients, according to recovery.gov: 550,621
Amount of stimulus money left to be spent: $122.8 billion of the original $787 billion
The economy by your numbers (suggested by our readers on Twitter):
85 percent of college graduates are going to return home to live with their parents after college, according to a May 2011 poll by Twentysomething Inc. Suggested by @SuzanneMcGeeNYC
The national debt is 95 percent of our GDP (Total debt = $14 trillion. GDP = $14.66 trillion as of 2010) Suggested by @David_McClurkin
Just over 80 percent of "prime age" American men (between 25 and 54) are employed today, compared to 95 percent in the late 1960s. According to OECD data, the U.S. has the lowest labor force participation rate for prime age men of any G7 country. Suggested by @JoshRBruce