The federal government does not exactly have a bounty of programs to help those people in groups that are in the most trouble as they look for work. And, even if it did, no plan is likely to help any of the three groups substantially. Black underemployment is not just a byproduct of education. People with little education cannot do much more than manual work, which often keeps them below the poverty line. Young people often lack “experience,” which is a serious circumstance when employers can pick and choose who they want for jobs more than at any time in recent memory. All in all, these people continue to be a drag on whatever social services they can get a hold of, and a pool of people who pay little if any taxes. The compounded effect on the economy is beyond imagination.
Gallup does not have much to add to an analysis of the situation, beyond what is already very clear:
Perhaps the clearest sign in these data is that more education translates to higher workforce participation rates.
And:
A potential silver lining in the country’s economic struggle is that if a significant number of workers have left the workforce to pursue more education over the past several years, those individuals will be poised to foster positive gains in the future, both for themselves and the economy, provided they are able to secure full-time jobs.
It is naive to believe that most of the people without jobs decided to go to school.
Methodology: Results are based on telephone interviews conducted as part of the Gallup Daily tracking survey Aug. 1 to 31, 2012, with a random sample of 31,364 adults, aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia, selected using random-digit-dial sampling.
Douglas A. McIntyre