Wednesday, July 14, 2010

The unemployment truth ~ can you handle it?

This recent YouTube video satirizes the games the federal government may be playing to cast a positive spin on current unemployment figures.

Since my husband, Mark, was laid off in January, we’ve become reluctant contestants in a whirlwind of other games, compliments of Corporate America:

- the “job-description-for-that-position-is-a-moving-target-because-we-don’t-know-what-we-want” shuffle,

- the “you’re-a-great-fit-but-we’re-putting-that-position-on-hold-for-now” waiting game,

and the ever-unpopular

- “we-want-to-find-one-person-with-the-skill-set-of-three-who-is-willing-to-work-for-peanuts” challenge

These games are the unreported reality behind the unemployment numbers. The economic climate has tilted the scales disproportionately in the employer’s favor, and corporations are taking full advantage -- at the expense of people’s lives and livelihoods.

Bottom line: businesses (small and large) are reluctant to “pull the trigger” and make a hiring decision. And, while the unemployed needed jobs yesterday, employers are taking their sweet time. As our friend, MF, put it, “Instead of ‘settling’ for someone who meets eight out of 10 criteria, they keep looking for someone who meets all 10,” he said. “So they continue to search for the left-handed brain surgeon – because the previous guy was left-handed!”

If nothing else, this adventure has reaped a rich crop of surreal scenarios for Mark and other job-hunting friends:

- multiple interviews (the record, so far, is 10)

- being told “you’re the one” only to have the position pulled – or filled by someone else

- unwanted membership in the 50-50 Club (companies reluctant to hire anyone older than 50, and unwilling to pay more than $50,000)

- companies offering contract positions instead of regular jobs with benefits

- a growing list of industries that are going “off-shore” for less-qualified (but cheaper) talent

- zero follow-up or feedback from prospective employers

and, most disturbing,

- the sense that being unemployed is an automatic disqualifier.

There is a growing disconnect between the employed and the unemployed. Nationally, lifelines like the COBRA subsidy and emergency extensions for unemployment benefits have faded away. Now, as the November elections approach, speculation and political posturing have consigned the people behind the unemployment statistics to the role of political football.

Something’s gotta give.

Until then, Mark and I will push forward, and try to maintain that delicate balance between hopefulness and raising our hopes too high.

3 comments:

  1. Very well written and glaringly true. My husband's layoff from a company and job he loved lasted 14 long months. Never thought we would still be in our "starter home" 15 years and counting.

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  2. Very well written. Hopefully, many of the unemployed will read it and realize they're not alone and will "push forward" as you say. I heard yesterday from a news commentator that "persistence pays" in all things. I hope so.

    Love,
    Mom

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  3. The 50-50 club observation really hit me between the eyes; you and I discussed the age issue, which certainly is not new - just new to our generation - but the phrase you coined is sadly so brilliant (As if receiving AARP mail isn't enough of a blow in itself!) At a time when we need a salary of substance the most so that we have the opportunity to put our children through college without incurring a $120,000 dept, formally reserved for the Ivy League institutions, we are instead faced with enormous hardships such as working until the day we die or saddling our children with this horrendous debt just as they are beginning their adult lives - welcome to the working world, kids!! and that's if they get a job. I am in grad school, incurring my own debt, to earn a Master's in TESOL, and I have just been told by a teacher friend that there are currently no jobs to be had in our area. Let's hope that when I finish in 2013, the economy will have improved, I can find steady employment with benefits,and my husband can finally stop worrying about making enough money to support us now and in retirement - if we even make it to that point!

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