On 12/7/13 1:56 PM, Doug Henwood wrote:
> The author has a point, but the employment figures in the household
> survey are extremely volatile. The numbers from the employer
> (establishment) survey are far more reliable, and they've been up by
> 200,000 for two months in a row. In November, there was also a sharp
> decline in the number of unemployed. All in all it was a pretty good
> report - mediocre by long-term standards, but by recent standards, a
> barn-burner.
>
> Doug


Of course, the other thing to be considered is the quality of the jobs 
being created.


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Stuck in a job with lousy pay? Better get used to it.

Some 28% of workers are expected to hold low-wage jobs in 2020, roughly 
the same percentage as in 2010, according to a study by the Economic 
Policy Institute.

The study defines low-paying jobs as those with wages at or below what 
full-time workers must earn to live above the poverty level for a family 
of four. In 2011, this was $23,005, or $11.06 an hour.

The economy won't support much growth in jobs with higher salaries, said 
Rebecca Thiess, policy analyst at the left-leaning Economic Policy 
Institute, who crunched government data to come up with these projections.

"Far too many economic pundits take for granted that the economy of the 
future will demand far greater skills and credentials," she wrote in a 
recent paper.

While all eyes are on Friday's monthly jobs report to find out how many 
positions were added in July, a growing number of economists are 
concerned with the quality of the jobs being created.

Lower wage occupations grew by 3.2% over the year ending in the first 
quarter of 2011, according to the National Employment Law Project. This 
was fueled mainly by the expansion of retail salespeople, office clerks, 
cashiers, food prep workers and store clerks, whose median hourly wages 
ranged from $7.51 to $13.52.
Debt busters!

Four of the five occupations with the highest concentration of 
low-salary jobs are set to grow by 2020. These include farming, personal 
care, building and grounds maintenance and health care support. All have 
at least 45% of their employees earning at or below so-called poverty wages.

Only food preparation jobs, which have the greatest share of low-wage 
workers at nearly 74%, are expected to shrink a bit.

And lousy paying jobs are getting even lousier, as their pay has fallen. 
Workers at this end of the pay scale actually found their wages shrank 
in recent years, according to NELP. Between early 2008 and early 2011, 
low-wage workers' median pay contracted by 2.3%, more than double the 
rate of mid-wage employees.

Meanwhile, higher wage workers enjoyed a small increase in pay.

Mid-wage jobs, which were hit especially hard during the recession, 
expanded by only 1.2%. Higher-salary occupations declined by 1.2%.

The predominance of low-wage jobs is not good for either workers or the 
economy, said John Schmitt, a senior economist at the Center for 
Economic and Policy Research. These jobs often lack pension benefits and 
health insurance, as well as sick days and vacation time. There is also 
little path for advancement.

If workers are making low wages, they can't afford to shop and prop up 
the American economy, he said. Around two-thirds of the economy is 
consumer spending.

Also, since low-wage workers are better educated now than they have been 
in the past, college may increasingly seem like a questionable expense.

"They will start asking whether college is worth it," Schmitt said. To 
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