Shakespeare once wrote …”that which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet”. Meaning of course, it matters what something IS, not what something is called.
The same holds true for unemployment. Or so I thought.
My brother recently joined the ranks of the unemployed – not by choice but he is there just the same. When I commented as such, he informed me that he is not ‘unemployed’; he is “in transition”. Huh?
It seems that since my brother is in between jobs – had a job, looking for another – he is not technically unemployed. Since he is simply transitional; his current condition of not having a job is not considered unemployed, therefore is NOT included in the unemployment statistics.
With that sort of logic, you may be out of work but you are not unemployed – you may be labeled a “discouraged worker”.
Discouraged workers are those that have given up looking for a job but are not classified as unemployed. Oh yes, then there is the long term discouraged worker and the short term – it depends on how long the worker has been seeking employment. Those workers who have been looking for work over a year are the long term discouraged workers – about 4 million adults – are not included in the tally. They show up in one of the auxiliary unemployment categories.
Then there are the “marginally attached” – these are the folks that are not looking for a job but say they want one. How the heck do they measure that?
The manipulation of the data and statistics goes on and on. The more I looked, the more unbelievable I found the distortion to be. Under measurement of unemployment has serious consequences. Relying on skewed numbers is like sticking our heads in the sand to avoid the ugly truth.
In my work, Foreclosure Consultant, the #1 reason I hear for people losing their homes is loss of income. Whether the loss is due to down sizing, jobs going overseas, technology, a crashed real estate market or whatever – if people can’t work, they can’t afford their homes.
Our lawmakers and politicians aren’t doing us any favors by manipulating the unemployment numbers and may very well be adding fuel to the fire as businesses continue to look to unemployment rates as one of the indicators of our economy.
Unemployment – joblessness – transitional – out of work – displaced … all are the same thing no matter what you call it (only this hasn’t got the same sweet smell of a rose).
of the country, it is truly a buyer’s market – buyer’s are almost brutal with their low offers and demanding contracts.
temporary and the worst that happens is the credit card and car payments are late. So you pay the late fee and catch up next month.