Jobs: Midnight in America
On the heels of recent news that U.S. unemployment had climbed to the highest rate since April 1983, the president of International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM; Washington, DC) likened the crisis to 'Midnight in America.' "Our country…
Posted: November 20, 2009
On the heels of recent news that U.S. unemployment had climbed to the highest rate since April 1983, the president of International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM; Washington, DC) likened the crisis to 'Midnight in America.'
"Our country is in the midst of an historic jobs crisis," declared Thomas Buffenbarger in remarks before the 2009 No Limits Public Policy Conference in Washington. "There is a momentum to this crisis, a momentum that keeps building in force with each passing month."
The official unemployment numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics were accompanied by nearly thirty pages of charts and tables that confirmed the depth of the ongoing jobs recession. "But percentages don't tell the whole story," said Buffenbarger, who tallied the 15.7 million unemployed Americans, 9.3 million who are working part-time involuntarily, the 5.6 million who looked for work last year without success and the 1.0 million Americans who simply vanished from the BLS statistics since May.
"When you add up those numbers, you reach 31.6 million Americans who are idled to some degree in this grave recession. Thirty-one million is a crisis, a long-term crisis," said Buffenbarger. "Thirty-one million means it is midnight in America, and the dawn is a long way off." He renewed his call for a second stimulus program with targeted relief for the critical manufacturing sector and modernized versions of FDR's Works Progress Administration and JFK's investment tax credit.
The IAM is among the nation's largest industrial trade unions, representing nearly 700,000 active and retired members under more than 5,000 contracts in aerospace, transportation, shipbuilding and defense-related industries.
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