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Lost Youth Employment in Illinois
By Stephen Lendman
Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, June 7, 2010
What affects Illinois plagues the nation, the Bureau of
Labor Statistics reporting in January that: "The unemployment
rate for young Americans has exploded to 52.2% - a post-World War II
high, according to the Labor Dept - meaning millions of Americans are
staring at the likelihood that their lifetime earning potential will be
diminished and, combined with the predicted slow economic recovery,
their transition into productive members of society could be put on hold
for an extended period of time." "The number represents the
flip-side to the Labor Dept's report that the employment rate of
16-to-24 year olds has eroded to 46.6 percent - the lowest ratio of
working young Americans in that age group, including all but those in
the military, since WWII." The Illinois Policy Institute says
the state is "in a fiscal meltdown that continues to spiral out of
control," exacerbated by the economic crisis, falling tax revenues, and
mismanagement in a state plagued by corruption. As a result, it
ranks in the bottom fifth of states by many key measures, including its
economic outlook; Gross State Product growth; debt burden; cumulative
per capita income growth; cumulative non-farm employment growth; net
out-migration; and property, gasoline, and sales tax burdens.
Unsurprisingly, the state's wealth has been declining. At the same time,
it's budget crisis has increased because of an expected $13 billion FY
shortfall equal to about half the state's operating budget - the largest
(on a per capita basis) of any state in America, including California.
To address it, huge cuts are proposed, including over $1.3 billion
from education from primary through university levels. An estimated
17,000 teachers will be laid off, exacerbating an already dire
situation, impacting students by school closures, larger class sizes,
eliminated programs, and sharp tuition and fee increases at state
colleges and universities, the University of Illinois considering a 20%
hike besides large cuts in its operating budget. As a result in
January, it furloughed over 11,000 administrators, academic
professionals and faculty at Champaign-Urbana, Springfield and Chicago
campuses, requiring them to take 10 unpaid days of leave by June. More
expected cuts will follow given the university's budget shortfall, one
expected to grow, not diminish. In Chicago and Illinois, planned
destruction of public education is part of a national effort to
privatize it to deny millions of working class youths a chance for a
better life, a decent job, or perhaps any at a time half the nation's
young people are unemployed. The results show up in
Northeastern University's Center for Labor Market Studies (CLMS) January
2010 report titled, "The Lost Decade for Teen and Young Adult Employment
in Illinois: The Current Depression in the Labor Market for 16 - 24 Year
Olds in the Nation and State." It shows that youths failed to
participate in the mid-2003 - 2007 labor market recovery, after which
their employment rate fell sharply through 2009. Teens (aged 16 - 19)
fared worst of all. In 2000, when employment peaked, their
employment/population ratio stood at 45.2%. By 2003, it was 36.8%, then
36.4% in 2005. At the start of the late 2007 economic decline, it was
34.6%, the lowest figure since WW II, and by November 2009, it was
26.2%, overall the largest employment decline of an age group.
Young 20 - 24 year olds have also been severely impacted, especially
men, Blacks, Hispanics, and non-college grads. Since 2000, teen
employment dropped by "20 percentage points" and for 20 - 24 year olds
by 13 points, numbers reflecting depression, not recession.
While in 2000, Illinois teens were 1.4 times as likely to be working as
adults 55 and older (48% v. 34%). Over the past decade, it shifted
dramatically to 40% for older workers to 28% for teens, Blacks faring
worst with only 12% in Illinois employed. A similar pattern occurred
nationally, impacting the long-term employability of those affected,
especially for the state and nation's poorest and most disadvantaged.
Chicago was especially hard hit given its large Black population.
In the metropolitan area in 2009, suburban teens were 1.6 times more
likely to be working than their city counterparts - 25% v. 16%, and
teens from low income families fared worst. Young adults also
fared poorly. In 2000, 72% of 20 - 24 year olds in Illinois had a job.
By November 2009, it was 60%, down 12 points. Blacks were especially
impacted with only one in four finding work in 2009. In metropolitan
Chicago, suburban employment dropped by 16 points. In the city, it was
19 points - "the equivalent of a Great Depression era, especially for
young Black men." The ability to stay actively engaged in
school, training, and/or employment is key to future labor market and
earning success. Underutilized youths run serious risks of long-term
unemployment and poverty, a growing problem in Illinois and nationally.
The CLMS conclusion is that Illinois and Chicago teens and young
adults "have been massively left behind in the labor market," given the
state's historic low employment rate, especially for teens.
Facing likely high jobless rates through at least 2015 or longer, teens
and young adults can expect "an unmitigated disaster" in their job
market and future prospects. Short of massive federal
intervention, nothing envisioned offers hope, especially given the
administration's penchant for budget restraint, except for Wall Street,
militarism, homeland security, and debt service. As a result, a
generation of youths is being trashed, discarded for other priorities.
Chicago's South Side Dilemma - America's Second Highest
Unemployment Rate On November 18, 2009, the Chicago Reporter
covered the problem based on 2008 US Census Bureau American Community
Survey data. It showed that the collective unemployment rate for the
Auburn Gresham, Englewood, Washington Heights and West Englewood
neighborhoods was 23.2%. Only Detroit's northeast corner was higher at
28.5%, and these figures exclude: -- discouraged workers who
want jobs but gave up looking; -- "marginally attached workers"
not actively looking after unsuccessfully seeking work in the past 12
months; and -- part timers seeking full-time employment but
can't find it. Including these categories, South Side Chicago,
Detroit and other community unemployment rates would be double or
more the official figures. Exclude the bogus birth-death ratio, and the
numbers are higher - at true depth of depression levels in communities
throughout America, including Chicago's West and South Sides (with large
Black and Latino populations in traditionally poor neighborhoods),
facing grim prospects for many years to come, on their own and out of
luck. A New Worktrends Study Rutgers University Edward
J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy's May 2010 report
titled, "No End in Sight: The Agony of Prolonged Unemployment," is based
on a March 2010 survey addressing the issue - systemic, growing and
endangering the nation. Its findings include the following: --
of those unemployed since August 2009, 21% found work by March 2010, 67%
are still unemployed and looking, and the remaining 12% gave up for lack
of success or pursued other directions including school; --
younger respondents had better success than older ones; -- women
fared better than men; -- Blacks, Hispanics and those least
educated were especially impacted; -- of the 21% who found work,
only 13% got full-time jobs; -- 65% of those finding employment
looked for at least seven months; another 28% for over a year;
-- 61% settled for less than they wanted, saying it was "something to
get you by while (looking) for something better;" -- more than
half of the newly reemployed took a pay cut; for about one-fourth of
them, it was significant, and one-third lost benefits; -- a
clear trend was the pessimism among long-term job seekers, and their
belief that they'll never again have employment as good as what they
lost; -- many of the unemployed have no safety net; --
only 30% have unemployment insurance (UI) or health care coverage;
-- 33% have neither; -- 21% have UI but no health coverage;
-- 16% have health coverage but no UI; -- "The Great Recession
has touched almost everyone;" -- over three-fourths of the
unemployed said the economic situation was having a major impact on them
and their families; examples given were reduced spending, increased
borrowing, missed debt payments, less medical care, and bankruptcy;
-- About 70% had to tap their retirement or other savings to get by, but
it's not enough; -- long-term unemployment caused physical and
emotional stress, isolation, and for some, substance abuse; --
nearly two-thirds believe the economy is undergoing fundamental,
long-lasting change for the worst; -- 61% rated the Obama
administration's handling of the economy fair to poor; 68% said fair or
poor on its handling of unemployment; and -- half of respondents
believe it's government's responsibility to help the unemployed, UI
being the main support. Despite reported economic improvement,
more illusion than fact, "millions of unemployed Americans see no end to
the Great Recession that wrecked their finances and threw their lives
into turmoil." The unemployed understand things better than media
pundits or political optimists, unable to fool all the people all the
time or those unemployed any time. As a result, they're angry,
pessimistic, wonder what's next, and say what's needed are government
efforts to create jobs, not cut taxes for business and the rich, the
standard formula since Reagan under Republicans or Democrats, governing
the same way or worse. It's why poverty, hunger, homelessness
and despair affect millions in the country. Food stamp usage is at
record highs, and millions have no health coverage because the state of
working America is dire and worsening for millions facing greater than
ever challenges on their own with government indifferent to their
plight. Is it any wonder they're disillusioned, pessimistic, fed up and
angry! Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge discussions with
distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and
Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy
listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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