Jobless Americans Saw Little to be Thankful for in 2011

Monday, December 19th, 2011

We all know that the Christmas holiday is a time for turkey-filled table settings, overstuffed family reunions, and, quite literally, reflecting on what we are fortunate to have- for large and small blessings throughout the year. But for many jobless Americans from California to the Carolinas, finding even the smallest things to be grateful for is more of a struggle in 2011 than possibly ever before, as they not only face limited unemployment incomes, but diminishing benefits in the new year.

In fact, according to an October analysis released by the National Employment Law Project, 1.8 million out-of-work Americans will have to find a way to live if Congress fails to pass a bill extending federal unemployment payments by year’s end.…

When “Hours Are the New Bonus,” Bankruptcy is the New Answer

Sunday, October 23rd, 2011

We talk a lot here about the trials and travails of underemployment, a perpetual condition of post-recessionary America, in which many, if not most, workers face stagnant wages and/or part-time jobs that fail to keep up with the rising cost of living in the new economy.

In particular, retail workers struggle for hours amid a weak economic recovery, clamoring for extra work in this lower-skilled and paying field. In fact, according to a new article by The Huffington Post, the difference between full and part-time employment can often be the difference between eking out a living or earning a quick trip into insolvency.…

No, Nothing, Nada: American Adds Zero Jobs in August

Saturday, September 3rd, 2011

As things heat up in the waning days of summer, the job growth cooled down in August, with the U.S. economy picking up [read my lips:] no new jobs in August as the unemployment rate stayed steady at 9.1 percent. These figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Friday now stand as the most clear and present symbol yet of a stalled economic recovery that has the words “double-dip recession” written all over it.

According to a new report from The Huffington Post, Wells Fargo economist John Silvia doesn’t believe the United States is currently in a recession now, but  he “wouldn’t be surprised if the economy enters into a recession in the near future.…

Many Americans Feel the Economy Will Never Recover. Are you one of Them?

Saturday, July 2nd, 2011

While a majority of economists and other financial experts firmly believe we are experiencing a modest economic recovery, a new poll reveals that a large, vocal minority of Americans feel that the economy will never fully recover from the effects of the recent “Great Recession.”

A New York Times/CBS News poll found that 39 percent of people responding believe “the current economic downturn is part of a long-term permanent decline and the economy will never fully recover.” The survey is one of many revealing overall distress with the current state of the American economic picture. Back in June, a CNN poll found that nearly half of Americans believe another Great Depression is either “very likely” or “somewhat likely.”

According to a recent article by The Huffington Post, there are even more signs that a lot of the nation’s folks are feeling financially fraught.…

Americans Move From Middle Class to Economic Meltdown…and How Bankruptcy Can Help

Friday, January 14th, 2011

Following the worst financial downturn since the Depression of the 1930s, men and women of the middle-class have found themselves profoundly affected by an economic meltdown that’s quickly pushed many into poverty. Widening unemployment paired with shrinking government safety nets means one unexpected and unfortunate incident—a sudden layoff, debilitating injury or illness, a missed mortgage payment—can mean a person’s life is instantly transformed from “happy-go-lucky” to the brink of homelessness or worse.

In fact, according to a new article on the state of the shrinking middle class in America, “As foreclosure and unemployment rates have swelled to epidemic proportions in the past two years, the ranks of the American homeless have grown: the number of homeless families rose 4 percent in 2009, and then 9 percent last year, a pair of new reports show.…

Personal Bankruptcy Filings Rise in FY2010

Monday, November 15th, 2010

While some experts are calling the latter portions of 2010 a new era of economic recovery, bankruptcy filings remain in true recession-era form.  In fact, according to the 2010 Fiscal Year statistics from the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, the number of bankruptcies filed between October 1, 2009 and September 30, 2010 increased from 1,402,816 to 1,596,355, marking an increase of 13.8%. And even though Chapter 11 (business and large individual) filings decreased, from 14,745 to 14,191, a 3.8% drop, and business filings overall also went down, from 58,721 last year to 58,322 this year, a 0.7% decrease, non-business or personal filings went up under all other chapters of the Bankruptcy Code, rising from 1,344,095 to 1,538,033, or 14.4%.…

Our Great Recession 2.0: 9,000 Resumes and Counting…

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

If you’re reading this, odds are you might be suffering through a pretty tough financial time. What may make you feel a bit better about your current economic situation is the firm knowledge that you’re not alone in this global economic meltdown. Specifically, millions of average Americans just like you are facing a shared financial burden as we all struggle to stay afloat in the wake of this country’s recent Great Recession—full of folks facing insurmountable health care costs, foreclosure, job insecurity and losses, and, in some cases, complete and total insolvency.

In this ongoing series, Our Great Recession 2.0, we’ll delve into some of the more unique stories of this decade’s unprecedented economic downturn, sharing the familiar faces and dire places people are going in order to handle our collective financial meltdown head-on.…

Anxiety Grows as the U.S. Recovery Stalls

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

With joblessness on the rise, retail sales in a slump and the stock market on the skids this week, many experts are predicting more economic uneasiness with a coinciding side of protracted unemployment troubles.

According to a recent Los Angeles Times article, “The U.S. economy and stock market ended one of the grimmer weeks of the year, as disappointing retail sales figures released Friday combined with other dismal data to heighten fears that the nation’s nascent recovery is stalling. The retail report, which came only days after the Federal Reserve announced a new effort to prop up the economy, fueled growing concern that the U.S.…

Our Great Recession 2.0: The Dwindling Middle Class

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

If you’re reading this, odds are you may be suffering through  a tough financial time. Yet, what might make you feel a bit better about your current ordeal is the knowledge that you’re not alone. Millions of average Americans just like you are facing a shared financial circumstance as they struggle to stay afloat in the wake of this decade’s Great Recession—facing foreclosure, job insecurity, and, in some cases, insolvency.

In the series, Our Great Recession 2.0, we’ll delve into some of the more unique stories of this decade’s unprecedented economic downturn, allowing you to see familiar faces and dire places people are going in order to handle our collective financial meltdown head-on.…

Our Great Recession 2.0: Sandwich Board Job Hunting

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

If you’re reading this, odds are you’re considering bankruptcy. As such, you have a lot on your plate. Yet, what might make you feel a bit better about being bankruptcy bound is the knowledge that you’re not alone. Millions of average Americans just like you are facing desperate circumstances as they struggle to stay afloat in the wake of this decade’s Great Recession—facing foreclosure, job insecurity, and, of course, insolvency.  In the series, Our Great Recession 2.0, we’ll delve into some of the more unique stories of this decade’s unprecedented economic downturn, allowing you to see familiar faces and dire places people are going in order to handle the financial meltdown head-on.…

A Shift for the Future: Unemployed Seeking Work Could Hit 26 Million

Friday, April 9th, 2010

While many economists say this decade’s Great Recession ended in the middle of 2009, millions of struggling Americans still working hard to find meaningful employment would definitely disagree…and now, the figures do too.

According to the latest U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics employment report, more than 40% of the nation’s 14.9 million unemployed workers have been out of a job for at least 27 weeks, with an average member of this beleaguered club having been unemployed for 29.7 weeks. For those keeping count, that’s nearly seven months.

And with each passing month, it becomes more and more clear that finding new jobs isn’t getting any easier, with leading economists speculating that not only is the nearly 10% unemployment rate not likely to fall anytime soon, but also that the actual number of workers seeking full-time jobs is on par to grow.…

More Bad News for the Middle Class and How Bankruptcy Can Help

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

Facing foreclosure.

Escalating medical costs.

High interest credit crunch.

Rising unemployment.

And that’s just January 2010.

While times are admittedly tough for everyone—with the poor getting poorer and even the recently rich and famous falling on hard times—a truly unique phenomenon of the recent global recession and continual economic downturn is how catastrophic it’s been for our country’s middle class, driving many in the majority further and “further from the American Dream” and, in some cases, “directly into poverty.”

As The Huffington Post reported this week in Laura Bassett’s insightful article “Middle Class No More, Families Struggle to Fight off Homelessness,” those in power are not blind to the desperate bind of average Americans: “President Obama, in his remarks to Senate Democrats on [February 3], pointed out that the middle class was hurting even before the recession.…

Trouble . . . Even In Paradise

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Nestled within the vast expanse of the ocean waters, hundreds and hundreds of miles off the Pacific coast, the islands of Hawaii probably don’t bring to mind thoughts of unemployment, foreclosures, bankruptcies, or the other recession-related concerns of the day. Hawaii’s geographic isolation makes it seem insulated from the difficult realities here on the mainland – economic and otherwise.

Indeed, that’s what Hawaii’s all about, right? It’s the land of “Mahalo,” where everyone is on “island time,” wears shorts all year long, and doesn’t worry about tomorrow. And, you may be thinking, what do Hawaiians really have to worry about anyway?…

From the Research Triangle to Silicon Valley: The Recession Hits the High Tech Industry

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

It looked like the high tech industry was going to dodge this economic downturn. Industry hot spots like North Carolina’s Research Triangle (the Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill area) and Northern California’s legendary Silicon Valley remained fairly secure throughout most of last year. While other major regions around the country saw big declines in every sector, the high tech areas continued to see job growth and stable housing prices. They were, it seemed, “recession proof.” Until the fourth quarter, that is.

Growth in the high tech industry came to a screeching hault in the fall of 2008. The problem? The major players in the industry had pretty much spent all of their venture capital funds.…

You’re Not Alone: People Are Seeking Bankruptcy Protection In Droves

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

Are you struggling with debt and considering bankruptcy? It helps to know that you’re not alone. According to the National Bankruptcy Research Center, almost 1.1 million people filed for bankruptcy in 2008. That’s up 33 percent from 2007, when around 800,000 people filed, and even more from the year before, when some 590,000 people sought bankruptcy protection. In fact, during the first 10 months of 2008, an average of more than 4,000 people per day filed cases. And the number of filings is expected to increase even further in 2009. This spike in filings over the last few years is in direct response to the current economic downturn, which has landed on the doorstep of millions of hardworking individuals who had been doing their best to make ends meet.…