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What You Ought To Know About America’s Unemployment Problem

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Reuters Writes: Help wanted: Obama calls on CEOs to help fix jobless problem

WASHINGTON, Jan 31 (Reuters) – President Barack Obama will meet on Friday with a group of chief executive officers who have agreed to make sure their companies do not rule out hiring people just because their resumes show they have been out of work for a while.

More than 300 companies have agreed to a one-page list of “best practices” for recruiting and hiring people from the ranks of the long-term unemployed – a group that has struggled to find work in spite of an otherwise improved economy. “It’s saying that those who are long-term unemployed should get a fair shot,” said Gene Sperling, Obama’s top economic advisor.

The U.S. jobless rate has remained stubbornly high at 6.7 percent, but Sperling told reporters the rate would be closer to 5 percent were it not for the roadblocks to finding work for those unemployed for six months or more.

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The whole notion of Obama calling on CEO’s to “help fix jobless problem” is an idiotic notion to begin with. A PR stunt. It’s identical to throwing fire crackers at a massive cargo ship and expecting any sort of a result.

The unemployment problem is a function of the overall economy. Business will start hiring when they hit capacity and start growing again. You might scratch your head and ask, well, isn’t our economy is growing fast? At least that’s what the media keeps telling us.  

NO. Again, the recovery you see is artificial. Driven by credit and speculation. Even the primary beneficiaries of this so called recovery (financial institutions able to borrow money for free) are for the most part not hiring. Why? It’s a complex issue. For some it has to do with technological improvements, for others with outsourcing and even robotics.

Yet, the main issue remains. There is no “TRUE” economic growth and too much uncertainty to warrant any kind of a hiring binge. By anyone.

Then there is the big issue of 6.7% unemployment. The number excludes those who have given up looking for work and those who are underemployed (part time, but want full time). If you add both categories into the pool, the true unemployment number is likely to be between 15-20%. That is a massive problem for the economy that is “supposedly” back to its pre 2007 levels.

Is there a solution? I don’t see it. If anything, the situation is about to get a lot worse. As my stock market work clearly indicates we are on verge of a severe bear market and another economic recession.

This will do nothing but make the unemployment problem a lot worse.     

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