Home > unemployment > The Human Disaster of Unemployment

The Human Disaster of Unemployment

from Dean Baker and Kevin Hassett

In 2007, before the Great Recession, people who were looking for work for more than six months — the definition of long-term unemployment — accounted for just 0.8 percent of the labor force. The recession has radically changed this picture. In 2010, the long-term unemployed accounted for 4.2 percent of the work force. That figure would be 50 percent higher if we added the people who gave up looking for work.

Long-term unemployment is experienced disproportionately by the young, the old, the less educated, and African-American and Latino workers.

While older workers are less likely to be laid off than younger workers, they are about half as likely to be rehired. One result is that older workers have seen the largest proportionate increase in unemployment in this downturn. The number of unemployed people between ages 50 and 65 has more than doubled.

The prospects for the re-employment of older workers deteriorate sharply the longer they are unemployed. A worker between ages 50 and 61 who has been unemployed for 17 months has only about a 9 percent chance of finding a new job in the next three months. A worker who is 62 or older and in the same situation has only about a 6 percent chance. As unemployment increases in duration, these slim chances drop steadily.

The result is nothing short of a national emergency. Millions of workers have been disconnected from the work force, and possibly even from society. If they are not reconnected, the costs to them and to society will be grim. 

Unemployment is almost always a traumatic event, especially for older workers. A paper by the economists Daniel Sullivan and Till von Wachter estimates a 50 to 100 percent increase in death rates for older male workers in the years immediately following a job loss, if they previously had been consistently employed. This higher mortality rate implies that a male worker displaced in midcareer can expect to live about one and a half years less than a worker who keeps his job.

There are various reasons for this rise in mortality. One is suicide. A recent study found that a 10 percent increase in the unemployment rate (say from 8 to 8.8 percent) would increase the suicide rate for males by 1.47 percent. This is not a small effect. Assuming a link of that scale, the increase in unemployment would lead to an additional 128 suicides per month in the United States. The picture for the long-term unemployed is especially disturbing. The duration of unemployment is the dominant force in the relationship between joblessness and the risk of suicide.

Joblessness is also associated with some serious illnesses, although the causal links are poorly understood. Studies have found strong links between unemployment and cancer, with unemployed men facing a 25 percent higher risk of dying of the disease. Similarly higher risks have been found for heart disease and psychiatric problems.

The physical and psychological consequences of unemployment are significant enough to affect family members. The economists Kerwin Charles and Melvin Stephens recently found an 18 percent increase in the probability of divorce following a husband’s job loss and 13 percent after a wife’s. Unemployment of parents also has a negative impact on achievement of their children. In the long run, children whose fathers lose a job when they are kids have reduced earnings as adults — about 9 percent lower annually than children whose fathers do not experience unemployment.

We all understand how the human costs can be so high. For many people, their very identity is their occupation. Few events rival the emotional strain of job loss.

IT seems clear that neither political party was prepared to deal with the crisis of long-term unemployment. In spite of the severity of the downturn, there was a general expectation that the economy would bounce back, as it had after previous downturns.

Some countries that were more familiar with long-term unemployment, notably Germany, were much better prepared to deal with the fallout from the crisis. The German government aggressively pushed work-sharing measures. This meant that instead of workers’ being laid off and receiving unemployment benefits, the German government helped companies keep employees, working fewer hours, on their payrolls by subsidizing their wages with the money saved on unemployment benefits.

The result of this policy is that Germany’s unemployment rate is now lower than it was at the start of the downturn, even though its growth has been no better than ours.

Thankfully, there is some effort to learn from this model. The recent bill that extended the payroll tax cut included a provision that covered the cost of work-sharing programs in the 23 states that already had them as part of their unemployment insurance systems, and it helped other states start such programs. This should slow job destruction in those states, which will improve chances for all workers seeking employment. From now on, the first line of defense during a recession should be to expand work sharing rather than simply extend unemployment benefits.

But these changes come late, and we must get much better at sending a lifeline to those who are hardest to reconnect.

In the United States and elsewhere, government training programs have a mixed record at best. Some people have suggested that the unemployed be encouraged to start their own businesses, and entrepreneurship is one valid option for some. But given that most new businesses will fail, it may not be the best advice to tell older workers who have lost their jobs to also put their savings at risk to start a new business.

Clearly, an improving economy will help some, but those who have been out of work for an extended period have a difficult time finding jobs for many reasons. They are more likely to be discouraged, more likely to have seen their skills wane, and more likely to be seen as a risk by a prospective employer.

Policy makers must come together and recognize that this is an emergency, and fashion a comprehensive re-employment policy that addresses the specific needs of the long-term unemployed. A policy package that as a whole should appeal to the left and the right should spend money to help expand public and private training programs with proven track records; expand entrepreneurial opportunities by increasing access to small-business financing; reduce government hurdles to the formation of new businesses; and explore subsidies for private employers who hire the long-term unemployed. Those who hire for government jobs must do their share, too: managers who are filling open positions should be given explicit incentives to reconnect these lost workers.

Every month of delay is a month in which our unemployed friends and neighbors drift further away.

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Categories: unemployment
  1. Dave Raithel
    May 16, 2012 at 12:52 pm | #1

    “A policy package that as a whole should appeal to the left and the right should spend money to help expand public and private training programs with proven track records….”

    Name one. And the rest is pabulum.

    But thanks for giving me my odds as I prepare for yet another job interview this Thursday, at age 56 years and unemployed since November 2010.

  2. May 16, 2012 at 1:27 pm | #2

    Yes but work sharing is not the solution to a structural failure which results in large numbers of people looking for work which they are willing and able to do, and when there is an unlimited amount of work that actually need to be done.

    • davetaylor1
      May 16, 2012 at 4:22 pm | #3

      I suggest it is a necessary part of the solution while, on the one hand, extreme specialisation puts continuity of essential production at risk (so stage managers provide understudies), and on the other, extreme concentration of wealth puts sufficiency of employers, wages, agriculture and infrastructure at risk. Even with livelihoods taken out of the equation via a Citizen’s Income, work sharing to resolve the first issue is needed before part-time self-employment facilitated by property sharing can resolve the second.

  3. Ignacio
    May 16, 2012 at 2:25 pm | #4

    It seems that these days balance sheets are much more important than human beings. At least most policy makers act as it is more urgent to repair balance sheets. They argue that repairing those is “conditio sine qua non”. Is it an argument or is it an excuse?

  4. May 16, 2012 at 3:33 pm | #5

    How does it feel to be aboard the Titanic?
    This has all happened before, many times.

  5. Podargus
    May 16, 2012 at 6:55 pm | #6

    Dean,you have commendable empathy for the unemployed but your prescriptions are not adequate to address the problem. Have you considered the Job Guarantee as per Modern Monetary Theory?

  6. May 16, 2012 at 7:37 pm | #7

    It was demonstrated as long ago as 1879 that Land Value Taxation is a prerequisite for dealing with this problem. But why has Dean Baker never uttered a word out this?

  7. May 16, 2012 at 10:48 pm | #8

    In the last decade od the XIX century, Cecil B. Rhodes once said that in order to avoid a civil war in Britain (due to massive unemployment) the British élite needed to have an empire (where to export their surplus population)… There are no more «frontier» lands to be grabed… In those days working hours were – regularly – 70 hours per week… Only in the mid thirties did it go down to 40 hours per week… These are undisptued facts of common observation. But some modern observers and commentators prefer to ignore the facts and the lessons of History.
    As welI as the simple fact that in capitalism the only way to get work.. is to get a job, either as self-employed «free lancer» (with what means of produciton?..) or to be employed by a firm (or another person… such as domestic help…). As someone once said «those who ignore History are bound to repeat the errors of their predecessors»… Or something to that effect. I keep my fingers crossed for the chance that my children do find work tomorrow. So that they can continue to feed my grandchildren withtout having to ask for my help…

  8. May 17, 2012 at 1:20 am | #9

    We need to do some new thinking around the idea that access to money can only be had by way of some kind of “work”. If we don’t reset out thinking that “work” inevitably turns into destroying what has been built up (war), so that we can start building all over again and distribute money via all the work needing to be done when the war is over.
    Unless, of course, you want to reduce the population by about 70 million people, as was done in WWII, before you start rebuilding again.

    Why not just rebuild old and crumbling infrastructure without using bombs to tear it down first?
    And there is plenty of space on Mars for an expanding population, or even in Northern Canada. Seriously. We have the technology to do it. Our main problem is being stuck in old modes of thinking supported by vested interests.

    • May 17, 2012 at 4:08 am | #10

      We need to do no new thinking, we need to revisit some old thinking. Forget work. Forget money. They are a confusing layer over the top. This prevents us from seeing what is really happening.

      The economy consists of people producing and exchanging goods and services. If they are prevented from doing so, then they will end up poor and “unemployed”. But the reality of this prevention is land enclosure ie there is no land freely available at the margin.

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