Saturday, Jul 31, 2010
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You can call me Al Is Unemployment at 9.5% or 24%? Federal Government Does Not Create Jobs or Earn Money There really isn’t a racist behind every bush
You can call me Al Does anyone else think Joe Biden in one sentence away from being called Al?
Is Unemployment at 9.5% or 24%? When we project our household job-seekers rate and calculate the share of Americans who are unemployed and looking for work, we get a job-seeker rate of 24.1% for July for a total of 37 million Americans vs. the government’s aforementioned 14.6 million.
Federal Government Does Not Create Jobs or Earn Money The fact is that businesses don’t really understand what their relationship is going to be with the Imperial Federal Government in the years to come. Taxes going up? More regulations and bureaucrats to gum up the works? Will ObamaCare become the disaster that so many expect?
There really isn’t a racist behind every bush The NAACP is going to release a resolution condemning the Tea Party based upon stories that are based upon rumors and/or lies.

You can call me Al

Does anyone else think Joe Biden in one sentence away from being called Al?

Is Unemployment at 9.5% or 24%?

Writing in the New York Times in November 2003, Austan Goolsbee, then a professor at the University of Chicago, flamboyantly accused the government of “cooking” the books regarding unemployment.

“The situation has grown so dire,” he said, “that we can’t even tell whether the job market is recovering. The time has come to correct the official unemployment statistics to account for those left out.”

Professor Goolsbee is now a top economic advisor to President Obama. Would he admit that the official jobless of 9.5% grossly underestimates the pain of job losses in America and do something to correct the situation?

Findings in recent IBD/TIPP polls suggest that now would be a good time to undertake such a project.

According to Labor Department data, the civilian labor force in June totaled 153.7 million people, 14.6 million (9.5%) of whom were unemployed. But in the latest IBD/TIPP poll conducted last week, 28.6% of respondents said at least one member of their household is unemployed and looking for work. This number for June was 27.8% and for May 28%.

When we project our household job-seekers rate and calculate the share of Americans who are unemployed and looking for work, we get a job-seeker rate of 24.1% for July for a total of 37 million Americans vs. the government’s aforementioned 14.6 million.

Source: Investors.com

 

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