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A little Surprise
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surprised to read this in the MSM let alone on MSNBC yesterday, there have been questions regarding the unemp statistics that the admin has been touting particularly when we heard it would take 400,000 jobs a month to improve the number and we've not seen anything close to that yet...as MSNBC points out...
" The unemployment rate has fallen by six-tenths of a percentage point from October's level of 8.9 percent. That is an unusually rapid decline " and "rapid decline in the jobless rate in the past few months has defied expectations; some economists argue that the widely-followed seasonally-adjusted numbers may be too good to be true" The CBO attributed much of the decline as due to shrinking of the workforce participation and specifically pointed out that it was not attributable to retirees....." MSNBC lets you in on a little secret down further in the article... "So far, the downward trend has helped the president. As the job numbers have improved, so has Obama's approval rating - rising from a low of 41 percent in October to 45 percent in February, according to the latest Gallup poll. But it remains to be seen whether that momentum can be sustained until the November election. The rapid decline in the jobless rate in the past few months has defied expectations; some economists argue that the widely-followed seasonally-adjusted numbers may be too good to be true. Some suspect the government's formulas for smoothing out seasonal factors may be inadvertently inflating the numbers. Gallup chief economist Dennis Jacobe figures that, without those seasonal adjustments, the jobless rate has actually been rising for the past three months, hitting 9.1 percent in January." I don't know about "inadvertantly" Economy Watch - Employment data may be too good to be true U.S. Unemployment Up in February |
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The same people I know that have been unemployed, upto 20 months and still looking, are just that, still looking. |
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My Sister in law's sister and brother in law moved back to RI from Hawaii in Sept, and both had decent paying jobs landed within a month or so. |
My brother moved to Rochester NY area less than two years ago when he got married. High school education, fair amount of experience in food manufacturing. Immediately got a job at north american brewing. Recently took a different job in commercial food production plant. Says there are tons of jobs in those fields.
Circumstantial evidence is great stuff isn't it? |
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They should thank their lucky stars.
My son-in law, union electrician,past foreman and liscensed inspector out for 20 months. On page 9 for a job right now. So much for stimulus and infrastructure. The guys have a lot of time to talk at the union hall everyday and won't be voting for Obama this time. My sister-in law, graphic designer, out of work and looking for 18 months Circumstantial, I feel your liberal compsassion. :doh: Different story when it's you or your family. |
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A big problem with the unemployment situation is people who don't (or can't) retrain or relocate to find employment. Right now we have a domestic workforce misaligned with the needs of global industry. -spence |
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Report: N.Y. shows some economic gains, but recovery stallingBinghamton, Ithaca have lost 1,700 jobs combined Feb. 2, 2012 | Rochester, New York City and the Glens Falls areas did better than the state average, with Rochester recovering 98.1 percent of the jobs it lost. The report attributed Rochester's economic success to gains in professional and business services, but it warned that the recent bankruptcy of Eastman Kodak "could result in the loss of thousands of jobs." While those numbers were generally positive, the average salaries of the jobs created in the past two years is more than 40 percent lower than the average salaries of the jobs lost during the recession. Other findings New York also has had the stigma of being unfriendly to business. The Tax Foundation, based in Washington D.C., last week named New York as having the 49th worst business climate in the nation -- ahead only of New Jersey. "The combination of high property taxes, high income taxes, high corporate-income taxes and high sales taxes all create a toxic climate for attracting businesses and people in the state and keeping businesses and people in the state," said Scott Hodge, the group's president. the governor apparently realizes this... 2/27 "the taxpayers are broke," said Cuomo. "And we can't keep raising taxes because we will continue to see businesses leave the state." |
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-spence |
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two years of job creation of jobs with salaries more than 40% lower on average than the jobs lost in a state with "high property taxes, high income taxes, high corporate-income taxes and high sales taxes all create a toxic climate for attracting businesses and people in the state and keeping businesses and people in the state"...and a pending pension nightmare perfect formula for more people dependent on various government programs |
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By the way Scott, I like how you have grabbed the party line. Looks like the economy is lining up for an Obama win, so we better start talking about underemployment or a Harvard professor or something. Underemployment was a pretty big issue 3 or 4 years ago too. Didn't matter then, did it?
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Unless you were just trying to be negative, which we've sort of come to expect so I guess it shouldn't be a surprise. -spence |
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-spence |
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fuzzy job growth #s with some personal knowledge based on fact. My reality is based on being an average citizen rubbing elbows with the folks on the street everyday and listening to the discontent with the administration by most of the middle incomer's. Sorry if those facts don't fit your reality. |
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At a time of rising gas prices, heightened talk of war with Iran and setbacks in Afghanistan, Mr. Obama’s approval rating dropped substantially in recent weeks, the poll found, with 41 percent of respondents expressing approval of the job he is doing and 47 percent saying they disapprove — a dangerous position for any incumbent seeking re-election. heh..heh :jump1: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/13/us...l.html?_r=2&hp |
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