So the actual raw numbers of jobs added are not to be figured into any calculation?Quote from tomdavis:
The only reason unemployement has come down at all is because of the massive increase in people on disability who are no longer counted as unemployed.
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http://www.usnews.com/opinion/artic...s-unhappy-under-obama?s_cid=related-links:TOP
... If you are on disability, you are not considered to be in the labor force either. As of April, we have added 5.5 million people to the disability rolls since the beginning of 2009, several million above the previous trend. There are now roughly 9 million people on disability. In 1992, there was one person on disability for every 35 workers. It is now about one for every 16 workers. It is hard to believe that so many people have become disabled; disability has literally become another fallback position for people out of work. If disability had stayed at the pre-recession growth rate, unemployment would be at least one percentage point higher, leading to a true unemployment rate much closer to 10 percent and perhaps significantly more.
Quote from Ricter:
So the actual raw numbers of jobs added are not to be figured into any calculation?
Nevertheless, strong job creation is good news for those who are looking for a job.Quote from tomdavis:
The number of people who are no longer counted as unemployed (even though they clearly are unemployed, but have given up looking for work or have managed to get onto disability) dwarfs the number people who have found jobs. That makes the unemployment percentage number meaningless.
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Quote from Ricter:
Nevertheless, strong job creation is good news for those who are looking for a job.
Edit: it's also good news for all of us who have a job.