US Unemployment Duration Stays Up

The big under-reported part of the unemployment situation is the increasing 
duration of unemployment. Being out of work for three weeks is very different 
than being out of work for 30 weeks. While over half the states and more than 
half the population does have extended unemployment benefits, it is a very 
scary prospect to not only be without a paycheck, but also having already 
exhausted your unemployment benefits. That means no income coming in, and given 
how low the savings rate has been over the past decade, likely no money period.

Economically it further depresses your spending, and psychologically it is just 
plain depressing. The average length of unemployment rose to 22.5 weeks in May 
from 21.4 weeks in April, and is up from 16.8 weeks a year ago. The median 
length of unemployment has also gone up sharply, reaching 14.9 weeks in May 
versus 12.5 weeks in April and 8.3 weeks a year ago. While the duration of 
unemployment always goes up during a recession, it has been particularly 
pronounced in this one (and the last expansion was noteworthy in how little it 
fell).

As can be seen in the graph below, on both measures the duration of 
unemployment far exceeds previous peaks. Also note that these measures normally 
continue to increase well past the end of the recession, which indicates to me 
that they are not about to stop rising any time soon.

We now have the unprecedented situation where the number of long-term 
unemployed (27 weeks or more) now outnumbers the short-term (less than five 
weeks) unemployed. Prior to last month this had never happened (well, the 
records were not kept during the Great Depression, but at least post-war it is 
unprecedented). The ratio of long-term to short-term rose to 1.21 from 1.10. 
That ratio has averaged 0.32 in the post-war period, and before this cycle the 
record was 0.78 hit in 1983.

A year ago, the ratio was an above average, but unexceptional 0.48. The number 
of short-term unemployed actually fell in May to 3.275 million from 3.346 
million in April, and is virtually the same as a year ago (3.257 million). 
Short-term unemployed now represent just 22.4% of the unemployed versus 38.1% a 
year ago.

Long-term unemployment has skyrocketed. There are now 3.95 million Americans 
who have been out of work for more than half a year, up from 3.68 million in 
April and just 1.57 million a year ago. The next group down, those who have 
been out of work between 15 and 26 weeks, is also swelling rapidly - rising to 
3.054 million in May from 2.531 million in April and just 1.238 million a year 
ago.

If the long-term unemployed are people with mortgages, it is hard for me to see 
how they will continue to pay them. This means there is still more pain in the 
pipeline for firms closely tied to the mortgage industry like Fannie Mae (FNM: 
0.70 -0.03 -4.11%), Freddie Mac (FRE: 0.76 0.00 0.00%) and the mortgage 
insurers like MGIC (MTG: 5.05 +0.25 +5.21%). In the past, they might have been 
able to refinance their houses and tap the equity to have the cash to continue 
to pay the monthly mortgage bill (not a great long-term strategy, but it could 
tide you over). That option is now closed off as most people have very little 
equity left in their houses.

If people still have room on their credit card limits, they will tend to max 
out the cards, not on frivolous stuff, but just to keep the lights on. Once the 
cards are maxed out, the next step is bankruptcy. This is not welcome news for 
big card issuers like Capital One (COF: 24.11 -0.89 -3.56%). Expect bankruptcy 
filings to continue to soar.

However, even bankruptcy does not help people that much since so many of the 
big debts that people have are non dischargeable. Thanks to hefty campaign 
contributions to key Senators (of both parties - 13 Democrats went along with 
almost the whole GOP in caving to the banks), the terms of a mortgage on a 
primary residence cannot be changed even if you file (terms on the vacation 
house or the yacht can be changed, though). Student debt, taxes and child 
support payments also cannot be affected by the judge.

This recession has made almost all Americans (well, actually almost all people 
regardless of nationality given the worldwide nature of the downturn) poorer. 
However, it is long-term unemployment that tends to lead to destitution. 
Poverty is not a subject that comes up often when people talk about the market.

Since poor people don’t have money, they don’t count as far as the markets and 
the overall economy is concerned. After all, if the poorest 10% of the 
population were magically able to double their spending, it would hardly move 
the needle in terms of overall aggregate demand.

Where this increase in poverty is likely to show up is in the budgets of all 
levels of government. State and local governments are already under severe 
budgetary constraints, and California is teetering near the edge of bankruptcy. 
More desperately poor people are not going to help the situation. However, 
unless we want to see massive tent cities, and malnourishment bordering on 
starvation in this country, these people will either have to be taken care of 
by the government (Section 8 housing, food stamps, etc.) or they will have to 
find jobs.

Yes Friday’s jobs report was far better than I had expected; however, let us 
not lose sight of the fact that the economy is still losing jobs at a 
historically very high rate. The rate of layoffs has slowed, but the pace of 
new hiring has not picked up. It will be a long, long time before the number of 
jobs surpasses the last peak of 115.8 million private sector jobs we hit in 
November of 2007. Until then, there will be plenty of pain from sea to shining 
sea



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