selfAdjoint said:
Job volatility (periods of personal unemployment) has gone way up in recent years. That's presented as "an efficient job market" by corporation fans, but it increases the stress and anxiety that static or falling payrolls induces. The people who can cope with this easily, like the people who still have long term jobs with one employer, are in the minority.
I consider that a
positive thing. I like the fact that I have the freedom to choose to change jobs multiple times in my life at higher pay.
My boss's first job was working as a draftsman. He got yelled at once for spending too much time hanging around the engineers. He told his boss he wanted to learn and go beyond being just a draftsman. His boss pointed to people in the drafting room (there were dozens of draftsmen) and said - 'that guy has been there for 15 years, that guy 20, that guy 30, etc.' Yea job security! Count me out (my boss quit immediately and today instead of still being in that room, owns his own company).
Regarding unemployment itself though,
HERE is some perspective: Following the 2001 recession, unemployment peaked (as it always does after a recession) at 6.3% in 2003.
After the previous recession, it peaked at 7.8% (in 1992).
After the previous recession, it peaked at
10.8% (1982).
After the previous recession, it peaked at 9.0% (1975).
You guys want to tell me again how bad we have it today (or, rather, had it in 2003 - today, unemployment is at 5.4% and dropping)?
Aquamarine - great post/point.
IvanSeeking said:
Boeing has layed off 30 year employees! This has never been seen before.
Huh? That sounds like early retirement. That's been common for decades!
edit: Forseeing an inevitable reply, no, the new jobs created under Bush are
not primarily lower-paying than the ones lost. http://www.census.gov/hhes/income/histinc/h03ar.html are the income limits for each 5th and the top 5% (what you have to make to be in each category). If people were dropping from the 2nd, 3rd, or 4th 5th down to the 1st fifth, it would be pushing the average and the upper limit of the bottom 5th
down even as unemployment is decreasing(the new people in the group would push the people on top out). Is it happening? Hint: no - even at peak unemployment, there was only a small drop in the salary of those on the bottom (1.6%), but its now going back up. In fact, of every group, the top 5% was the hardest hit by the recession/high unemployment - average income is still down 2.8% from its peak 2 years ago - the other 4 groups are all at all-time highs.