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8.8 Million Now Officially JoblessMore Like 15 Million
AFL-CIO
The federal Bureau of Labor Statistics April jobs report confirmed what
millions of U.S. workers know all-too well: The
nations job crisis is bleak and getting bleaker.
Some 8.8 million jobless workers are counted in the official U.S. unemployment
rate of 6 percent, up from 5.8 percent in March, according to the May
2 report.
Even the dismal 6 percent unemployment rate is worse than it looks. In
addition to the 8.8 million, another 1.4 million jobless Americans looked
for jobs in the past year but now are so discouraged they have not looked
recently. Added to these 10.2 million jobless workers are an additional
4.8 million who are involuntarily working part-time because their hours
were cut or they have been unable to find full-time employment. They bring
the total number of unemployed and underemployed to some 15 million.
The American economy lost a net 48,000 jobs in April, but the beleaguered
manufacturing sector shed 95,000 positions. The economy now has lost more
than 2.6 million private-sector jobsnearly 100,000 jobs per monthsince
President George W. Bush took office.
Unemployment Insurance Extension Critical
The number of job-seeking Americans out of work for six months or more
has reached 1.9 millionwhich matches the
highest figure in a decade and includes almost 22 percent of
all the unemployed.
More than 1 million long-term unemployed are nearing the end of their
unemployment insurance, with the May 31 expiration of the Temporary Extended
Unemployment Compensation (TEUC).
Extending unemployment insurance
is a top priority for working families. Sen. Edward
Kennedy (D-Mass.) has sponsored the Economic Security Act of 2003,
while Reps. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) and Benjamin
Cardin (D-Md.) have introduced the Unemployment Benefits Extension
Act (H.R. 1652). Both bills would continue the emergency program for six
months. The bills also would increase benefits to 26 weeks (with more
time for workers in states with especially high unemployment), cover the
million-plus workers who have exhausted extended benefits without being
able to find work and expand unemployment insurance coverage for low-wage
and part-time workers.
"Extending the emergency unemployment insurance program throws a
vital lifeline to jobless workers and benefits the entire country by pumping
$1.73 into the economy for every dollar spent on benefits," says
AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney.
"By contrast, a dollar spent on cutting dividends taxes for the wealthy
that President Bush wants pumps only 9 cents into the economy."
Earlier this year, Bush proposed a $726 billion tax cut, which would
primarily benefit millionaire taxpayers. Faced with opposition in the
House and Senate, Bush now is pushing for $550 billion.
"When the economy is staggering, Congress and the president should
act immediately to extend emergency unemployment insurance, an economic
stimulus thats nearly 2,000 times more effective than the dividends
tax break and thats fully paid for by the resources in the unemployment
insurance trust fund," says Sweeney.
Urge your senators and House
representatives to vote for these measures. The Capitol switchboard phone
number is 202-2243121
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