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posted by janrinok on Sunday October 09 2016, @03:39AM   Printer-friendly

The "quiet catastrophe" is particularly dismaying because it is so quiet, without social turmoil or even debate. It is this: After 88 consecutive months of the economic expansion that began in June 2009, a smaller percentage of American males in the prime working years (ages 25 to 54) are working than were working near the end of the Great Depression in 1940, when the unemployment rate was above 14 percent. If the labor-force participation rate were as high today as it was as recently as 2000, nearly 10 million more Americans would have jobs.

The work rate for adult men has plunged 13 percentage points in a half-century. This "work deficit" of "Great Depression-scale underutilization" of male potential workers is the subject of Nicholas Eberstadt's new monograph "Men Without Work: America's Invisible Crisis," which explores the economic and moral causes and consequences of this:

Is it an aberration, or a harbinger of things to come?


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  • (Score: 1) by Francis on Sunday October 09 2016, @01:52PM

    by Francis (5544) on Sunday October 09 2016, @01:52PM (#412061)

    Precisely. This isn't like the black community where there's a demonstrable achievement gap at virtually every level of society and a relatively understood cause. These are women that have the same opportunities as their male counterparts and receive the same pay as their male counterparts, but insist on whining about it anyways.