The Slow Disappearance of the American Working Man

Lumi

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The Slow Disappearance of the American Working Man


A smaller share of men have jobs today than at any time since World War II

As President Barack Obama puts together a new jobs plan to be revealed shortly after Labor Day, he is up against a powerful force, long in the making, that has gone virtually unnoticed in the debate over how to put people back to work: Employers are increasingly giving up on the American man.

If that sounds bleak, it?s because it is. The portion of men who work and their median wages have been eroding since the early 1970s. For decades the impact of this fact was softened in many families by the increasing number of women who went to work and took up the slack. More recently, the housing bubble helped to mask it by boosting the male-dominated construction trades, which employed millions. When real estate ultimately crashed, so did the prospects for many men. The portion of men holding a job?any job, full- or part-time?fell to 63.5 percent in July?hovering stubbornly near the low point of 63.3 percent it reached in December 2009. These are the lowest numbers in statistics going back to 1948. Among the critical category of prime working-age men between 25 and 54, only 81.2 percent held jobs, a barely noticeable improvement from its low point last year?and still well below the depths of the 1982-83 recession, when employment among prime-age men never dropped below 85 percent. To put those numbers in perspective, consider that in 1969, 95 percent of men in their prime working years had a job.

Continues....
 

Duff Miver

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Ahhh, the good old days when the goods we consumed were made in the USA by Americans.

In 1969 95% of men had jobs. They made electronic goods, shoes and textiles, cameras and watches, tools and toys. They bought houses, supported their families, sent their kids to college and paid taxes.

Now those jobs are in China.

Joe six-pack gets his T-shirts for a dollar less at WalMart, then blames the President when he is laid off.

The Walton family makes more billions, bankers and hedge fund managers buy yachts and mansions, and the American dream gets flushed down the toilet.

We're becoming the capitalist utopia of a privileged few, and million of serfs.

The Ayn Randies rejoice.

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Lumi

LOKI
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Do have this response saved as a word document and paste it every time a "Working Man" thread is started?

Who opened the flood gates to China?
 

Trench

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The older, wiser version of Gekko got it right, Duff.

Greed is a "weapon of mass destruction".

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