Hard Work Isn’t Working for All Americans

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

You’ve read the headlines. You’ve heard the network commentators. Despite the reported recent economic recovery, post-recessionary American is marked by a new, and troubling, era of economic inequality.

One of the major reasons for the widening gaps between rich and poor is that minimum wage remains at $7.25, the same rate as it was in 2009, despite dramatic rises in the cost of living.

As a result, those in the lowest income brackets face higher bills while the wage floor remains where it was years ago, leaving millions of Americans squeezed under it. But these facts aren’t lost on the experts—from financial insiders to those most financially impacted.…

Private Jobs Are on the Rise Amid Public Sector Worries

Sunday, January 22nd, 2012

The best holiday gift may have been a private sector hiring surge in December 2011, as employers gifted the American job market with 325,000 new workers. At the same time as a the rise in public sector jobs, claims for unemployment benefits fell, raising high hopes that recent labor market woes are over and a new year may mark a new era in employment optimism.

According to a report from Reuters, the surge cam as a shock to those following the job marker trends, which to date had been less than stellar. “The ADP National Employment Report’s December job tally surprised economists who had expected a 178,000 gain.…

A Renewed Interest in Credit Card Interest

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

We talk a lot about the dangers of using credit cards, the nation’s plastic pariah that contributes to many living beyond their means, causes people to pay incredibly high interest, and in more cases than we care to share, leads a lot of folks to file for bankruptcy.

And so for the many thousands of you who were hoping to pay off credit cards quickly and easily as your New Year’s resolution, we have some bad news.

Credit is getting easier to get and interest rates are getting even higher in 2012.

According to the consumer information site CreditCards.com, credit card interest rates climbed to record highs last month, reaching an average of 15.22 percent.…

The Older They Are, The Harder It Is

Monday, November 28th, 2011

Or, at least that’s what older workers believe.

According to a new survey from AARP, older workers say economy worse than last year. Nearly two thirds of workers in the 50+ age group first surveyed by AARP’s Public Policy Institute in 2010 said things had gotten worse by the time the senior lobbying powerhouse followed up in August. Fewer than one in 10 said their view of the economy had improved. The remainder felt like things were close to the same.

According to The Huffington Post’s Arthur Delaney, “Of the more than 5,000 people surveyed last year, 16.7 percent said they were jobless.…

Making a Dent in the Unemployment Disaster

Sunday, October 23rd, 2011

With news this month that almost 40 percent of Americans belive unemployment is the biggest issue facing the country—a figure that leapt from 29 percent between August and September 2011—it’s clear that folks are beginning to believe that joblessness more than “the economy” as a whole is the nation’s most important problem as well as a primary concern for them as part of a larger pool of citizens just struggling to get by in post-recessionary America.

These Gallup polling numbers explain why the Obama Administration’s recent announcement, and submission to Congress, of the American Jobs Act—combining stimulus and tax cuts to spur job growth—is more important than ever to a nation struggling to find a solution to its rampant unemployment and underemployment problems.…

Cities Cut Back.

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

You might think when city officials need to cut personnel costs, they start by letting public employees go.  But according to a new article from The Huffington Post, “firing people isn’t the first thing they look to do: it’s the third.” Ranking the reduction methods, HuffPost evaluates the eight top ways that city officials are dealing with budgetary woes—according to the National League of Cities—including:

(8) Reduce Pension Benefits
A full 18% of cities facing increasingly thin budgets cut back on pension benefits to shore up spending costs in 2011.

(7) Revise Union Contracts
Another 18% trimmed union agreements as a way to cut salaries and reduce previously bargained-for benefits.…

An Unhealthy New Trend in Health Care Costs

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011

If it seems like it’s been a while since we’ve talked about the rising cost of health care, that’s because up until this year, these mounting medical costs had leveled.

But in the new America, it seems you can’t keep a high cost down.

In reality, the costs of employer-sponsored health insurance surged during 2011, cutting short a timely trend toward only “moderate growth.” According to a report released this week by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research and Educational Trust, annual premiums for family coverage climbed 9 percent and surpassed $15,000 for the first time. Premiums for single coverage rose 8 percent compared to 2010.…

Bank of America Layoffs and You

Sunday, September 25th, 2011

Last week, Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America said it would cut about=a35,000 jobs and reduce annual expenses by $5 billion, as it struggles with costs from its 2008 takeover of Countrywide Financial Corp and a nearly 50 percent drop in share price this year.

The layoffs could have huge ripple effects for the North Carolina economy.

Already dealing with double-digit unemployment in July 2011 (10.1 percent) due to over 100,000 state government layoffs, the state’s impending loss of additional jobs for thousands in the languishing local private financial industry could mean the slow-to-recover North Carolina economy could get much worse before it gets better.…

Is Unemployment Your Primary Concern?

Monday, September 19th, 2011

President Barack Obama, who submitted his American Jobs Act to Congress earlier this week—including bills that aim to use a combination of spending and tax cuts to spur job growth—seems to be on the pulse of a larger political issue.

Though the unemployment rate has been high for months, it’s never been more clear that joblessness is the primary concern for nearly a majority of average American voters.

According to a Gallup poll released Thursday, almost 40 percent of Americans said in September that unemployment or joblessness is the biggest issue facing the country. This figure lept up from 29 percent figure in August.…

U.S. Credit Downgrade Ramps Up Fears of Another Recession

Monday, August 15th, 2011

U.S. Credit Downgrade Ramps Up Fears of Another Recession

Standard and Poor’s recent downgrade of U.S. government debt is capturing headlines across the country and around the world. And with the major agency’s actions to cut the United States government’s top credit rating, financial experts and commentators are finding themselves increasingly concerned that the American economy is headed back into another economic downturn.

According to a new repot from The Huffington Post, “The announcement that the rating agency had reduced the U.S. government’s AAA rating for the first time in history came after days of punishing declines in the stock market, and has now cast a shadow over economic prospects in the months ahead.…

Are You One in a Million (1.4 Million to Be Exact)?

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

It seems like only yesterday that being termed “one in a million” was a good thing.

But that was apparently before the economic crisis.

Today, there are over one million Americans (1.4 million to be exact) who have been out of work for 99 weeks or longer. Deemed as the “very long-term unemployed,” this overflowing group of unfortunate unemployed workers tends to skew more mature, with little discrimination between those with (or without) a college education.

In fact, according to an article by The Huffington Post, “The CRS report shows that very long-term unemployment is more likely to afflict older workers than younger ones.…

More Proof the Job Market Still Isn’t Working

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

Just released unemployment numbers in North Carolina are showing some promising signs of post-recessionary economic improvement. Unemployment officially dropped in 93 of 100 North Carolina counties from last month’s figures.The state’s adjusted unemployment rate is at 10.1%, with 36 counties at that level and the number of workers who found jobs in February up by16,500.

But another new report reveals that these new and improved numbers touting a rebounding labor market may be a bit premature: unemployment rates may be dropping, but not necessarily for the right reasons.

According to Bloomberg, “About half of the fall in the jobless rate during the last four months was caused by Americans who gave up looking for work and left the labor force — a development that he said isn’t something to welcome….…

UPDATE: Tens of Thousands More Victims Threatened in NC’s Unemployment Benefits Standoff

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

Tens of thousands of jobless North Carolinians are wondering when the stalemate will end between a Republican-led state legislature and the Democratic governor—both wanting to pass a state budget, but with little to agree on other than that.

According to a new article from Arthur Delaney, entitled “North Carolina Unemployment Standoff Drags Endlessly,” a reporter who has been watching the now more-than-a month-long budget boondoggle play out in front of both local and national media outlets, the disagreements between the legislative and executive branches is unchanged this week despite attempts at concessions on both sides.

“North Carolina Gov. Bev Perdue (D) does not like the latest attempt by Republicans in the General Assembly to link unemployment benefits and budget cuts, which is bad news for the tens of thousands of jobless North Carolinians who want their benefits back.…

Are You Ready for Next Year’s Round of Government Layoffs?

Friday, May 27th, 2011

If you’re one of the hundreds of thousands of Americans working for state and local governments or other agencies, you may be one of the many wondering why so many so-called “financial experts” are saying the economic recovery is all around us. For you, it likely feels like the same old lingering economic malaise—especially as news emerges that your job may be on the chopping block in 2011, with even more cuts slated for 2012.

In fact, according to a new report from Reuters, times may get tougher on the state and local level before they get better as even larger government layoffs are expected next year.…

UPDATE: The Latest on North Carolina’s Unemployment Benefits Boondoggle

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

As we’ve been reporting, thousands of North Carolinians were on course to lose their unemployment benefits as North Carolina lawmakers failed to revise the calculations used to determine when these payouts from the Extended Benefits program could be distributed. These same benefits were then placed in limbo when the Governor vetoed a bill in which Republican legislators in the North Carolina General Assembly attached budget cuts to the state’s eligibility for these federal benefits.

Because of this partisan tug-of-war between GOP lawmakers and Democratic Gov. Beverly Perdue, compensation payments have been cut off for about 37,000 jobless North Carolinians for more than a week.…

UPDATE: Many North Carolinians’ Long-Term Unemployment Benefits in Limbo

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

As we reported just last week, 37,000 North Carolinians were on course to lose their unemployment benefits as North Carolina lawmakers failed to revise the calculations used to determine when these payouts from the Extended Benefits program could be distributed.

This week, however, the legislative actions were more purposeful as Republican legislators in the North Carolina General Assembly attached budget cuts to a bill maintaining the state’s eligibility for these federal benefits. In the end, North Carolina Gov. Bev Perdue found these budget cuts too extreme as it meant public employee layoffs, and, as a result, vetoed the very legislation that would have allowed 37,000 laid off workers in the state to receive their final 20 weeks of federal unemployment insurance benefits.…

Pay Cuts Mean Poor Prospects for Those Returning to the Workforce

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

Apparently the lingering economic malaise has its limits: according to the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, the U.S. economy added 216,000 new jobs last month. This good news appears to support recent claims that the labor market recovery, as Bloomberg put it, is finally “gaining traction”.

But according to a new report from The Huffington Post, those who have been lucky enough to find work, any work, are also often finding their former standard of living to be completely out of reach. “While the recovery of the labor market and the broader U.S. economy depend critically on job growth, equally important is the quality of those jobs.…

37,000 North Carolinians Will Lose Their Jobless Benefits This Month. Where Will You Turn?

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Just this month it was announced that about 37,000 North Carolinians would suddenly lose their unemployment benefits. This news emerged as at least eight other states avoided a similar fate by changing the calculations used to determine when these benefits could be distributed.

But according to Bloomberg Businessweek, the same revisions weren’t considered in the Tar Heel State. “North Carolina lawmakers…so far haven’t shown interest in revising the formula, which some advocates say risks adding to the misery of an already stagnant job market by cutting off tens of thousands of the long-term unemployed from their benefits. ’It’s critical that we keep these benefits in place,” said Alexandra Sirota, director of the left-leaning North Carolina Budget and Tax Center.…

Whether Employed or Not, How Health Care Costs Can Be Hazardous to Your Budget

Saturday, March 26th, 2011

For jobless Americans—forced from their careers during an era of economic uncertainty (and in an environment of staggering unemployment rates)—the lingering financial malaise has proven to be more than just a little bit hazardous to their health.

As it turns out, nine million laid-off Americans lost all health insurance in last two years.

In fact, according to a new study from the Commonwealth Fund, a private proponent of health care reform, 57 percent of Americans who lost a job that provided them health insurance could not afford to regain that health care coverage post-layoff.

What’s worse is that the same report found that some 19 million Americans who tried to purchase a health plan on their own in the insurance marketplace between 2007 and 2010 were either rejected due to the dreaded “pre-existing condition” excuse or were simply unable to find affordable coverage that fit their health care needs.…

What Cuts to Retiree Health Plans Could Mean for You

Monday, March 7th, 2011

If you’re a recent retiree or even if you have long-since left the workforce, the lingering economic malaise just got a little bit more hazardous to your health. As it turns out, many states and municipalities searching for places to trim their budgets are setting their sights on the relatively sizeable expenses of providing health care benefits to millions of retired state and local workers.

According to The New York Times,  “As they contend with growing budget deficits and higher pension costs, some mayors are complaining that their outlays for retiree health benefits are rising by 20 percent a year — a result of the wave of retirements of baby boomers and longer life expectancies on top of the double-digit rate of health care inflation.…