Population Growth Is Up but Job Creation Is Negative

Article author: 
Brenda Walker
Article publisher: 
Limits To Growth
Article date: 
12 May 2014
Article category: 
Our American Future
Medium
Article Body: 

The following chart is a dismal reminder of the failure of the post-recession “recovery” to grow jobs.

Moreover, the lack of jobs should illustrate the insanity of the Senate’s scheme to double legal immigration in addition to a work permit amnesty for at least 11 million [to 40 million] lawbreaking foreigners.

In addition, smart machines are rapidly reducing the need for human workers who insist upon paychecks...

The trends for the American worker are unpromising: a 2013 report from Oxford University estimated that 45 percent of US jobs are “vulnerable to computerization” within the next 20 years.

Economy Not Keeping Up With Population Growth, Washington Free Beacon, May 7, 2014

8 million added to working population, half a million fewer jobs

Despite adding more than 8 million people to the working-age population since 2007, total employment has declined by half a million, according to an analysis by the Senate Budget Committee.

Before President Barack Obama took office 259.7 million people were part of the working-age population, or between ages 16 and 65.  Now, the number has risen to 267.7 million.

However, in the same time period, total employment declined from 146.3 million to 145.7 million.  In other words, 531,000 fewer people have jobs.

“This statistic highlights an alarming trend that has embodied the president’s economic policies: more and more people are leaving the workforce entirely,” according to the analysis, which was released by Ranking Member of the Senate Budget Committee Jeff Sessions (R., Ala.). “There are 58 million working-age people who are not working, and the labor force participation rate stands at 62.8 percent, the lowest level in 36 years.”

In defining the pool of potential workers, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) includes anyone over 16, excluding inmates in penal and mental facilities, and active duty members of the Armed Forces.

For their analysis, the Budget Committee compared Labor Department and Commerce Department data to manually exclude persons over 65.  The analysis of the working-age population, which totals 267.7 million, therefore, includes everyone between the ages of 16 and 65, including individuals who are students, stay-at-home mothers, and others who choose not to work full-time.