• MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    8
    ·
    11 months ago

    I feel like we should be able to quantify what “employed” is in the unemployment metrics… Like, if you barely have a job and it pays you next to nothing (below a living wage) then you should be considered to be in the unemployment pool.

    I think if that was the way it was counted, then the numbers would actually look atrocious.

    In all actual fact, they specifically exclude people who are not actively looking for a job from the unemployment numbers. Historically this was to reduce the unemployment numbers from all the unemployed spouses that were stay at home parents or whatever. Now it’s just a way to mask how many have gotten so thoroughly fucked by the system that they gave up.

    • tmyakal@lemm.ee
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      11 months ago

      if you barely have a job and it pays you next to nothing (below a living wage) then you should be considered to be in the unemployment pool.

      They do track this. It’s called underemployment. On the Bureau of Labor Statistics website, you can find this table which indirectly gives this data: the difference between U-5 and U-6. Underemployment is about 2.4%.

      • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        11 months ago

        2.4% is way too low.

        AFAIK, underemployment is more on the lines of having someone overqualified doing the work at the pay rate of that lower worker.

        Eg. A doctor working as a personal support worker.

        A doctor would be horrendously over qualified for a job as a PSW, but if they’re doing that work for the same pay as a PSW, they’re under employed. This is an extreme example, but it demonstrates the point using jobs that I feel most people would be familiar with. If you’re not, then the only hint I can give is that I believe the role of PSW used to be and occasionally still is referred to in hospitals as an “orderly”.

        There’s still a non-trivial number of people with doctorates working at places like Starbucks and McDonald’s… Who are underemployed, but I’m specifically saying that if you’re “employed” but you only get, say, 5 hours a week, and you have to hold four jobs just to clock 30+ hours in a week, or you need four jobs to make ends meet, then that’s an insufficiently employed person. IMO, anyone in that situation would be better off on social assistance, where available. Being incapable of finding a full time job or finding a job that will be able to provide full time hours, should be counted.