Friday, June 06, 2014

Wreckovery

Today is D Day.

The day I met my wife.

When we met 31 years ago no one , NO ONE, could have convinced us that we would be in these kind of straits now 28 years into marriage.

Six years ago we filed taxes on around 100k.

We had heavy bills in mortgages and credit cards and car loans and student loans and on.

But we were always able to make the payments, even if it was just minimums, every month and on time.

Now, 6 years later, we filed taxes on just over 40k, and that's thanks largely to her very underpaid job. My own job is barely 1/4 of what she earns.

But those bills are still there and we are behind on nearly all of them, mortgages included. The credit cards are now unpaid altogether simply because we do not have the money and it is either feed the kids or pay Citi or Chase or HSBC. The notices and calls are getting louder and noisier and we can't even afford to file bankruptcy.

So when anyone tries to tout this as good news:

The job market has reached a significant milestone: Nearly five years after the Great Recession ended, the economy has finally regained all the jobs lost in the downturn.
It's all I can do to choke back the rage.

We have two of those jobs. And see where it has left us.

Over Half Of May Payroll Growth Is In Education, Leisure And Temp Help Jobs

If there was some hope that in April the trend of the US adding low-quality (as in low-paying) jobs may finally be coming to an end, this came to a quick end in May, when more than half of the 217K jobs added were in the lowest paying sectors. Specifically:


These three lowest paying categories amount to 116K, or well over half of the total jobs gains. What's more, if there was some hope for a construction renaissance in April after 34K jobs were added in the sector, in May this too came to a grinding halt after only 6K construction jobs were added. The best paying jobs: financials and information, also deteriorated, with fins adding 3K in May, half of the April gain, while 5K Information jobs were outright lost in the past month, compared to a gain of 1K jobs.

Still, we are in "better" shape than many in this recovery.

Man found shot after deputies attempt to serve eviction notice

SARASOTA, Fla. -- One man is dead after deputies attempted to serve an eviction notice

According to the Sarasota County Sheriff's Office, deputies with the with the SCSO Civil Section were attempting to serve an eviction notice at a home on Fraser Pine Boulevard in The Enclave neighborhood off Palmer Boulevard Thursday morning.
 

During the attempted service, a gunshot was heard from within the residence.
Deputies were able to secure the area and gain entry into the house. One occupant was found deceased from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. There were no other occupants in the house.

So if anyone really believes this recovery is real, that 217,000 jobs added is something to crow about in any way and thatb6.3% unemployment is any kind of improvement over the 9+ % of five years ago take a good look at this chart:

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-06-06/good-and-not-so-good-news-about-us-jobs-one-chart

and then get back to me.

Because from where I sit right now, the situation is past grim and bordering on hopeless.

And damned depressing.


FUCK YER HOPE AND CHANGE



3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I realize this won't fix what you have described in painful detail, but it confirms what you already know first hand.-HRW


e Revolt Against The Masses: How Liberalism Has Undermined The Middle Class

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Epaminondas said...

150K JOBS A MONTH ...minimum to keep up with population growth. We are NO WHERE. Worse still the jobs are not in software engineering, electric engineering, R&D, aeronautical design, civil engineering, or durable goods manufacturing careers.

Jobs are service, distribution and health related. What % part time? Good news would be 4% unemployment, record work force population Percentage, and 10% growth in manufacturing for a year, simultaneous with inventory shrinkage (indicating people BUYING with their new disposable income).

Unknown said...

Hi Midnight.

"CHANGE" - 37.2%: Percentage Not in Labor Force Remains at 36-Year High, at that time, Jimmy Carter was president.

http://www.mfs-theothernews.com/2014/06/change-372-percentage-not-in-labor.html


'Cooking' the books works only so long.