The great unmentionable: Mass unemployment in America
15 April 2013 
Judging by the official political debate and its media reflection 
in the United States, one would hardly know that the country remains in 
the grips of the deepest jobs crisis since the Great Depression. 
Virtually all attention is concentrated, on the one hand, on record 
stock prices and corporate profits, declared to be proof of a robust 
economic recovery, and, on the other, the supposed need for ever-deeper 
cuts in social programs upon which tens of millions of people depend.
The Obama administration is spearheading a historic and unprecedented 
assault on the core social reforms of the previous century: Social 
Security and Medicare. Working in lockstep with the Republicans, it has 
already set into motion savage cuts at the federal level in social 
services and workers’ income in the form of the so-called “sequester” 
process. Meanwhile, school closures, teacher layoffs and attacks on 
pensions and health care continue unabated at the state and local level.
There is no reflection in what passes for the “news” or the discussions that 
dominate the political establishment of the concerns of the broad masses of the 
population, who confront the devastating impact of protracted 
mass unemployment. Behind this wall of official silence, the corporate 
elite is using the jobs crisis as a club to slash wages and impose 
sweatshop conditions not seen since the 1930s.
The Labor 
Department’s employment report for March, released earlier this month, 
provided an indication of the actual state of economic life beyond the 
confines of Wall Street and corporate America. It showed that only 
88,000 jobs were created in March, less than a third of the previous 
month and half the number predicted by economists.
Most 
significant was the sharp fall in the labor force participation rate—the 
percentage of the population that is working or looking for work. This 
figure fell to 63.3 percent, the lowest level since 1979. Half a million people 
gave up looking for work in March alone.
The fall in the 
labor force can be explained in part by the chronic state of long-term 
unemployment. The average duration of unemployment increased in March to more 
than 37 weeks.
Under the sequester cuts signed into law by 
Obama last month, 4 million long-term unemployed will suffer an 11 
percent cut in their already paltry jobless benefits. With perverse 
logic, the fall of the official unemployment rate, largely due to 
discouraged workers giving up looking for a job, has been used to 
justify cuts in the duration of unemployment benefits in states 
throughout the country.
The vast majority of the new jobs that have replaced those wiped out in the 
economic crisis pay sharply lower wages.
The situation facing young people in the US is particularly dire. The labor 
force participation rate for workers under the age of 25 hit 54.5 
percent in March, the lowest level in four decades. According to one 
calculation, the real youth unemployment rate, if those who have left 
the labor force are taken into account, is 22.9 percent, comparable to 
what exists in the euro zone.
Millions of young people, deprived 
of a future, are forced to work for menial pay, if they are able to find a job. 
Millions of older workers are being thrown into abject poverty.
In an earlier period, the present level of unemployment would have been 
treated as a national disgrace. In 1965, the same year Medicare was 
enacted, President Lyndon B. Johnson remarked, “The promise in the 
Employment Act of job opportunities for all those able and wanting to 
work has not yet been fulfilled. We cannot rest until it is.” At the 
time, the unemployment rate was 5 percent. There were 3.7 million 
officially unemployed, one third of the number officially unemployed 
now.
Of course, Johnson’s rhetoric was never translated into 
reality. His “War on Poverty” was largely stillborn. Nevertheless, the 
growth of social struggles—the civil rights movement, militant strikes 
by industrial workers, ghetto uprisings—compelled a frightened ruling 
class to make certain concessions to the working class.
That was 
at a high point of the post-World War II boom and the global economic 
dominance of the United States. Nearly 50 years later, with US 
capitalism having suffered a vast internal decay and decline in its 
global economic position, the Obama administration acknowledges the 
epidemic of joblessness only in the reverse, praising the number of jobs that 
“our businesses” have created.
The decay of American 
capitalism finds its most noxious expression in the staggering and 
ever-increasing level of social inequality. This, in turn, is bound up 
with the erosion of America’s industrial infrastructure and the 
ascendancy of a parasitic financial aristocracy, which derives its 
wealth not from the production of useful goods, but rather from 
financial manipulations of a criminal and socially destructive 
character.
The Obama White House represents the convergence of the Wall Street mafia and 
the military/intelligence apparatus. It policies 
can be summed up as social counterrevolution and the preparation for 
mass repression at home and war and neocolonial conquest abroad.
The one constituency that is totally disenfranchised and excluded from any 
say in policy under the antidemocratic two-party system in America 
is—the vast majority of the people! It is no different in Europe, Japan, China 
and the rest of the world, where the ruling elites are carrying 
out brutal austerity measures in defiance of the will of the people.
There is no answer to mass unemployment and the growth of poverty in America 
outside of a mass struggle by the working class. Such a struggle is 
inevitable, but it must be consciously prepared and armed with a 
socialist and revolutionary program.
There is no reform wing of 
the bourgeoisie. Nothing can be gained by appealing to one or another 
big business party. The resources necessary to provide jobs, decent pay, health 
care, pensions, education and housing must be obtained through a mass struggle 
to expropriate the financial oligarchy, take the levers 
of economic life out of private hands and establish a planned economy 
based on social need, not private profit.
Andre Damon

http://wsws.org/en/articles/2013/04/15/pers-a15.html


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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