Ok, you guys are laying turds all over this thread and I am too lazy to multi-quote, so one at a time:Skjellyfetti wrote:CID1990 wrote:Where do you get that? I don't think you have a source for that. Public sector jobs are not way down. They aren't even down.![]()
57,000 jobs were added in the private sector.
39,000 jobs were lost in the public sector.
Public Sector Job Cuts Threaten Recovery
Since peaking in 2008, local governments have shed almost 500,000 jobsA measly 18,000 jobs were added in June, carried by an increase of 57,000 jobs in the private sector but dulled by losses of 39,000 jobs in the public sector. As government stimulus winds down and states move to close massive budget gaps, public sector cuts should continue to grow, labor market experts say.http://money.usnews.com/money/careers/a ... n-recovery" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;While the overall picture painted in the report is gloomy, the bigger story may lie in cuts on the government front. In June, local governments reported job losses of 18,000, and the federal government shed 14,000 jobs. Nearly 100,000 local government employees have lost their jobs so far this year, and 464,000 have found themselves jobless since local government employment peaked in September 2008. Meanwhile, private sector employers, who cut jobs at a more rapid pace earlier in the recovery, have slowly added jobs. Since March 2010, when private sector employment rose for the first time in more than two years, private employers have added about two million employees to their payrolls.
This is nothing more than a scare piece, trying to justify runaway public sector hiring at the federal level. I'll give you one example as to why this number is misleading. The Charleston Police Department from 2008 to 2010 has "lost" 5 positions. However, those people were not fired. They left for greener pastures, and CPD did not replace them. However, those jobs are counted as "lost". Jobs lost in this way to do not increase the unemployment rate.
Secondly, even if your numbers are spot on, you do realize that there are more than 300 million people in this country, right? You could take away significantly more than that and not budge the unemployment rate one iota.
Here's a very simple question for you, SK.
How many public sector jobs need to go away tomorrow to raise the unemployment rate by just 0.1%?
(Here's a hint: Take the number of working age Americans, and then multiply by one tenth of a percent.)








