The Bureau of labor Statistics compiles a stat called the
Employment-Population Ratio that is the number of people working of the available workforce, defined as people 16 and over. I am sure some of those folks are not working because they wouldn't otherwise, but in the current climate many have no choice. As has been reported repeatedly, the
9.2% unemployment underestimates the number of people unemployed because after a long enough time people just leave the workforce and are not counted in the number. The chart below shows the current ratio is 58.2%, that's the lowest Employment-Population ratio since 1984.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh7hqfRUVrcZrBYm-7N_3fnc2rA1UyTqwJW53lUM2RmAFGQTOCIBj0YH6Zu3zPalLXvbDFKkHjX0wschVTN6cZyyJslUsN-frIXoav3rv2FYW2_8-7b21dSSr5qpORXve940_si2g/s400/LNS12300000_39837_1310478056186.gif)
A longer time series shows the history since 1948.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhP-RjCejYa7_fmvFbj_LokfEeho0tKd291F9hJ65obFC5GjOIEil0EUtIGp24mONYFXH3-_JeibBLwguXyxQUkxNYv3TZ99mzxNzCo1Mp4lgH6DFLO7VU3dWivLSJF5pLF6r_1FQ/s400/LNS12300000_41079_1310479600189A.gif)
It's been lower in the past, but that is a generation ago. I personally would like Congress and the President to start working on jobs now.
(Unstable Isotope at Delaware Liberal got me
thinking about this)
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