The Sidelines of a Jobs Crisis
by Andy Kroll
Sometime in early June -- he's not exactly sure which day -- Rick
Rembold joined history. That he doesn't remember comes as little
surprise: Who wants their name etched into the record books for not
having a job?
For Rembold, that day in June marked six months since he'd last
pulled a steady paycheck, at which point his name joined the rapidly
growing list of American workers deemed "long-term unemployed" by the
Department of Labor. In the worst jobs crisis in generations, the ranks
of Rembolds, stranded on the sidelines, have exploded by over 400% --
from 1.3 million in December 2007, when the recession began, to 6.8
million this June. The extraordinary growth of this jobless underclass
is a harbinger of prolonged pain for the American economy.
This summer, I set out to explore just why long-term unemployment had
risen to historic levels -- and stumbled across Rembold. A 56-year-old
resident of Mishawaka, Indiana, he caught the unnerving mix of
frustration, anger, and helplessness voiced by so many other unemployed
workers I'd spoken to. "I lie awake at night with acid indigestion
worrying about how I’m going to survive," he said in a brief bio kept by
the
National Employment Law Project,
which is how I found him. I called him up, and we talked about his
languishing career, as well as his childhood and family. But a few phone
calls, I realized, weren't enough. In early August I hopped a plane to
northern Indiana.
[
Research support for this story was provided by the Investigative Fund at the Nation Institute.]
Tomgram: Andy Kroll, The Face of An American Lost Generation
One strangeness of our moment is that any U.S. Army commander going into an Afghan village can directly pay locals to, say, fix some
part of that country’s destroyed infrastructure. That’s considered a
winning-hearts-and-minds counterinsurgency strategy. On the other hand,
here in the U.S., it's other hearts and minds that are targeted. Our
government has proven itself adept at handing untold sums over to
failing banks, investment outfits, insurance firms, and auto companies,
but remains allergic to handing significant dollars directly to
out-of-work Americans, New Deal-style, to go back to work and help our aging infrastructure.
With the backing of the Nation Institute’s superb
Investigative Fund,
TomDispatch has sent its associate editor Andy Kroll on the road to
confront the reality of the meteoric growth of long-term unemployment,
of what joblessness really means to hearts and minds in our country.
This is the first result of his journalistic labors. To catch him
discussing the jobs crisis on Timothy MacBain's latest TomCast audio
interview, click
here or, to download it to your iPod,
here. Tom
Unemployed: Stranded on
The Sidelines of a Jobs Crisis
by Andy Kroll
In job terms, my timing couldn't have been better. I arrived around
lunchtime, and was driving through downtown South Bend, an unremarkable
cluster of buildings awash in gray and brown and brick, when my cell
phone rang. Rembold's breathless voice was on the other end. "Sorry I
didn't pick up earlier, man, but a friend just called and tipped me off
about a place up near the airport. I'm fillin' up my bike and headin' up
there right now." I told him I'd meet him there, hung a sharp U-turn,
and sped north.
Twenty minutes later, I pulled into the parking lot of a modest-sized
aircraft parts manufacturer tucked into a quiet business park. Ford and
Chevy trucks filled the lot, most backed in. Rembold roared up soon
after on his '99 Suzuki motorcycle. Barrel-chested with a thick neck,
his short black hair was flecked with gray, and he was deeply tanned
from long motorcycle rides with his girlfriend Terri. "They didn't even
advertise this job," he told me after a hearty handshake. Not unless you
count the inconspicuous sign out front, a jobless man's oasis in the
blinding heat: "NOW HIRING: Bench Inspector."
His black leather portfolio in hand, Rembold took a two-sided
application from a woman who greeted us inside the tiny lobby. He filled
it out in minutes, the phone numbers, names, dates, and addresses
committed to memory, handed it to the secretary, and in a polite but
firm tone asked to speak with someone from management. While we waited,
he pointed out the old Studebaker factories in a black-and-white sketch
of nineteenth century South Bend on the wall, launching into a Cliffs
Notes history of industry in this once-bustling corner of the Midwest.
A manager finally emerges with Rembold's application in hand. Rembold
rushes to explain away the three jobs he had listed in the “previous
employers” section -- stints at a woodworking company, motorcycle shop,
and local payday lender. They’re not, he assures the man, indicative of
his skills; they're not who he is. You see, he rushes to add,
he's been in manufacturing practically his entire life, a hard and loyal
worker who made his way up from the shop floor to salecs and then to
management. That kind of experience won't fit in three blank spots on a
one-page form. Unswayed, the manager thanks him formulaically for
applying.
If the company's interested, the manager says -- and it feels like a
kiss-off even to me -- they'll be in touch, and before we know it we’re
back out in the smothering heat of an Indiana summer. Rembold tucks his
portfolio into one of the Suzuki's leather saddlebags. "Well, that's
pretty standard," he says, his tone remarkably matter-of-fact. "At least
I got to talk to somebody. You're lucky to get that anymore."
A Perfect Storm Hits American Labor
The numbers tell so much of the story. The 6.76 million Americans
-- or 46% of the entire unemployed labor force -- counted as long-term
unemployed in June were the most since 1948, when the statistic was
first recorded, and more than double the previous record of 3 million in
the recession of the early 1980s. (The numbers have since dipped
slightly, with a total of 6.2 million long-term unemployed in August.)
These are people who, despite dozens of rejections, leave phone
messages, send emails, tweak their cover letters, and toy with resume
templates in Microsoft Word, all in the search for a job.
Not counted in this figure are so-called "discouraged workers,"
including plenty of former searchers who have remained on the
unemployment sidelines for six months or more. In August of this year,
1.1 million Americans had simply stopped looking and so officially
dropped out of the workforce. They are essentially not considered worth
counting when the subject of unemployment comes up. Nonetheless, that
1.1 million figure represents an increase of 352,000 since 2009. In
effect, the real long-term unemployment figure now may be closer to 7.5
million Americans.
So who are these unfortunate or unlucky people? Long-term
unemployment, research shows, doesn't discriminate: no age, race,
ethnicity, or educational level is immune. According to federal data,
however, the hardest hit when it comes to long-term unemployment are older workers
-- middle aged and beyond, folks like Rick Rembold who can see
retirement on the horizon but planned on another decade or more of work.
Given the increasing claims of age discrimination
in this recession, older Americans suffering longer bouts of
joblessness may not in itself be so surprising. That education seemingly
works against anyone in this older cohort is. Nearly half of
the long-term unemployed who are 45 or older have "some college," a
bachelor's degree, or more. By contrast, those with no education at all
make up just 15% of this older category. In other words, if you're older
and well educated, the outlook is truly grim.
As for the causes of long-term unemployment, there's the obvious
answer: there simply aren't enough jobs. Before the Great Recession,
there were 1.5 workers in the U.S. for every job slot; today, that ratio
is 4.8 to one. Put another way, with normal growth instead of a
recession, we’d have 10 million more jobs than we currently do. Closing
that gap would require adding 300,000 jobs every month for the next five
years. In August 2010, the economy shed 54,000 jobs. You do the math.
Worse
yet, if you imagine five workers queued up for that single position,
the longer you're unemployed, the further back you stand. Economists
have found that long-term unemployment dims a worker’s prospects with
each passing day. "This pattern suggests that the very-long-term
unemployed will be the last group to benefit from an economic recovery,"
Michael Reich, an economist at the University of California-Berkeley,
told Congress in June.
But when you consider the plight of the long-term unemployed, don’t
just think jobs. The 2008 recession was a housing-driven crisis, thanks
to the rise of subprime mortgage lending, government policy, and greed.
As a result, 11 million borrowers
-- or nearly 23% of all homeowners with a mortgage -- now find
themselves "underwater": that is, owing more on their mortgages than
their houses are worth. Negative equity at those levels creates what
Harvard economist Lawrence Katz calls a "geographic lock-in effect,"
stifling jobs recovery. Typically, American workers are a mobile bunch,
willing to bounce from one city to the next for new jobs, but not when
homeowners are staying put to avoid selling their underwater houses for a
loss.
Another factor in the explosion of long-term unemployment lies in a
shift away from temporary layoffs. In the recessions of 1975, 1980, and
1982, 20% of unemployed workers had been only temporarily laid off; as
of August of this year, just 10% had. In their heyday, automakers and
steel companies laid off workers as demand dipped, but backstopped by
powerful labor unions, those workers were regularly recalled as demand
and production revved up again. No more. Now, if you’re long-term
unemployed, you’re undoubtedly trying to find a new job with a new
employer, a more daunting process. Add it all up and you have Rick
Rembold.
"Feast or Famine" in RV Land
Rembold calls himself a Democrat -- "not the peace sign, hit-the-bong
type," he hastens to add, but "a
tear-off-your-head-and-shit-down-your-neck Democrat." He can't stomach
Glenn Beck or talk radio here in the Land of Limbaugh, and with equal
zeal he watches MSNBC's Rachel Maddow and FX's "Sons of Anarchy," a
gritty, violent series about outlaw motorcycle gangs.
It was a Friday morning, and we were in Rembold's kitchen, drinking
coffee and talking politics. He wore jeans and a black polo shirt, and
paced as he spoke. Ideas and frustrations poured out of him like water
from an open spigot; the man had a lot on his mind. The night before, I
had asked him to show me around the area, especially the economic engine
that sustains it: the recreational vehicle, or RV, industry. Once the
coffee ran dry, we piled into my car and set off.
Cities such as Elkhart and Middlebury and Mishawaka and Wakarusa are
the cradle of the RV industry. Headquartered here are major
manufacturers like Jayco and Forest River. At its peak, northern Indiana
churned out three-quarters of all RVs on the road -- motor homes and
fifth-wheels, pop-up campers, travel trailers, and toy haulers.
Producing them was grueling work, but you could fashion a middle-class
lifestyle out of what it paid. "Workin' in the RV industry, they'll work
you to death," Rembold said. "People would literally be sprintin' from
one place to the next with power tools in their hands."
Then came "the Panic of '08," as one RV salesman put it to me.
Teetering banks choked off consumer lending as credit markets froze. The
downturn pummeled the industry. In 2009, sales of fifth-wheels, a
smaller trailer you hitch to a truck or SUV, plummeted by 30%, travel trailers by 23.5%, campers by 28%. Manufacturers like Jayco, Monaco Coach, and others collectively laid off thousands, and the region's unemployment rate spiked
by more than 10% in a year. When a newly elected Barack Obama arrived
in Elkhart in February 2009 to tout his stimulus plan, the jobless rate
was 15.3%; a month later, it reached 18.9%, more than twice the national rate. At one point, Elkhart County, with a population of 200,000, was shedding 95 jobs a day.
In the 1990s and first years of the new century, RV manufacturers
couldn't hire enough workers. They ran ads in regional and national
newspapers looking for more bodies. "We couldn't even get people to
drive over from South Bend to work in Elkhart," a sales rep for Jayco
told me.
By the time I arrived, though, the industry had left its feast years,
hit the famine ones fast, and was showing the first signs of crawling
back. Driving through Middlebury, a town of 3,200
east of Elkhart, I saw a few carrier trucks hustling in or out of
plants, some full employee parking lots, and rows of gleaming new RVs
dotting the green landscape like herds of boxy cattle.
Whether the industry will ever fully recover, however, is unclear.
The manufacturers I spoke to were optimistic about future sales.
"Despite the logic of what's going on in the economy, the buyers are
still there," said Jerimiah Borkowski, a spokesman for Thor Motor Coach.
But a 2009 analysis by Indiana University's Business Research Center
projected that by 2013 annual RV shipments still won't have returned to
their 2006 peak. "I personally don't think it'll ever rebound to
pre-2008 levels," says Bill Dawson, vice president and general manager
of Clean Seal Inc., a South Bend-based supplier of parts to the RV
industry. Dawson points to industry contractions -- Thor's $209 million acquisition of Heartland RV, the Damon Motor Coach-Four Winds merger, as well as numerous factory closings -- and says, "Fewer players mean fewer units and fewer people making them."
Rembold knows the RV industry's ebb and flow all too well. He's lived
in its shadow for the majority of his working career, including 18
years with Architectural Wood Company (AWC), an Elkhart-based
manufacturer of wood products used to outfit RVs and conversion vans.
He's made handcrafted tables, faceplates, valences, and overhead
consoles, usually from oak or maple, finishing them with the gloss that
gives Kimball grand pianos and Fender guitars their shine.
But by the 1990s and 2000s, his line of work looked to be headed the
way of the 8-track tape. The conversion van industry was sinking. RV
manufacturers had begun replacing wood with cheaper plastics and
vinyl-wrapped plywood. (At an RV show we visited, Rembold could step
inside a vehicle and determine by smell alone if the manufacturer used
the real thing or not.) Orders plummeted at AWC. By early 2006, the
company's financial health was so dire that the owner, a good friend of
Rembold's, let him go. A few years later, the company itself folded.
Rembold then caromed from one job to the next: selling used cars and
motorcycles, driving a semi truck, working behind six inches of
bulletproof glass as a teller at Check$mart. He briefly ended up back in
RVs, supervising employees sewing tents for campers, and then, last
winter, temped at a struggling wood shop. That was his last job. After
the holidays, he was never called back.
Like millions in his predicament, Rembold knows his chances of
finding a decent-paying job doing what he loves decrease with each
temporary, non-manufacturing job he’s taken. What doesn't fit on a
resume -- and so frustrates him most -- is his adaptability, if only he
could convince an employer of it. College degree or not, certification
or not, he insists, he's always adapted to new settings. "Could I do
construction? Hell, yeah, I could do it. I could measure in metric, in
standard; I'd correct cutting mistakes, do it all. I just can't get
anyone to let me do it."
As we talked, the RV plants gave way to lush farmland and we found
ourselves driving through Amish country, sharing quiet two-lane roads
with horse-drawn buggies. By early afternoon we rolled into the town of
Topeka (pop. 1,200), past the Seed and Stove store
and the Do-It Better hardware shop. Then Rembold's cell phone buzzed, a
rare break in the conversation. It was his daughter, Angie, 28, the
youngest of his three kids.
He listened, then yanked off his sunglasses. "You what?"
Angie managed the Check$mart in Goshen, the check-cashing outfit
Rembold once worked for, and she was good at her job, Rembold had told
me earlier. Now she was agitated, talking so loudly that I caught bits
and pieces of the conversation over the din of the radio. Something
about a bonus owed that she didn't receive. When Rembold abruptly hung
up, he muttered, "Jesus H. Christ."
Later, over lunch at what looked to be Topeka's lone diner, he
explained that Angie planned to quit her job over the unpaid bonus.
After a full morning telling me about the nightmare of being out of
work, he looked stunned. "You'd think she'd have learned from my
situation. I don't think she realizes how her life is going to change."
The Trauma of Long-Term Unemployment
It’s hard, even for the long-term unemployed, to grasp just how
drastically life can change without work. Studying past recessions to
discover just what does happen, researchers often focus on the collapse
of the steel industry in Pennsylvania in the late 1970s that would turn a
once-thriving region into a landscape of shuttered factories and ghost
towns. Eighty thousand people worked in steel in the 1940s; by 1987,
4,000 remained.
In one study, male Pennsylvania workers with high
seniority experienced a 50% to 100% spike in mortality rate in the first
year after job loss. The life expectancies of those laid off after age
40 decreased by one to one-and-a-half years. In the long run, these
laid-off Pennsylvanians suffered a 15% to 20% reduction in earnings.
Those hardest hit in terms of lifelong earnings, economists found, were
not low-skilled laborers or highly skilled wealthy elites, but workers
who had managed to forge a middle-class lifestyle.
Suicide rates also increase, researchers have found, when
unemployment rises. (In Elkhart County, near where Rembold lives,
suicides exceeded the annual average by 40% last year.)
The 1980s recession in Pennsylvania was no outlier either, economic
researchers have discovered, and the effects of long-term unemployment
spread well beyond directly afflicted workers. In the short run, for
instance, a child whose parent loses his or her job is 15% more likely
to repeat a grade year in school, according
to University of California-Davis economists Ann Huff Stevens and
Jessamyn Schaller. This is especially true for children with
less-educated parents.
Over their lifetime, the children of jobless fathers earn, on
average, 9% less each year than similar children without laid-off dads,
and are more likely to receive unemployment insurance and social welfare
support at some point in their lifetimes. New research also suggests
that the children of laid-off parents may have lower homeownership rates
and higher divorce rates.
"I'm Not Competing With Some College Kid"
In the early evening, Rembold and I holed up in his office, a small
room off the main hallway with a computer, two desks, and countless
framed photos. Rembold clicked open a folder on his Internet browser
labeled "Careers" and walked me through his daily online job-hunting
routine. He checks half-a-dozen job boards regularly, though openings
tend to pay only in the $8- to $10-an-hour range. He rejects most of
those out of hand.
"Wouldn’t that be better than no job at all?" I ask.
Rembold gnaws on the question. "I can't afford my home at $8 or $10
an hour," he finally replies. Right now, he’s getting by on unemployment
checks, a small inheritance from his mother that's rapidly dwindling,
and loans from family members. Still, he'd rather keep trolling the job
boards in the hopes of finding something offering a living wage. "I've
got a mortgage to pay, for Christ's sake," he told me. The few openings
he sees with good pay, however, involve odd hours, dusk-to-dawn shifts
that would mean he'd almost never see Terri, whose schedule at an
aluminum company in Elkhart is early morning to mid-afternoon.
And then, under the dollar signs lurks something else: self-respect.
Unlike his father, Rembold never went to college, and doesn't consider
himself too good for service-sector jobs. But he visibly agonizes over
the fact that, as a 56-year-old man with decades of experience, he's
competing with people half his age for low-wage jobs. After all, as a
machine operator fresh out of high school at White Farm Equipment, he
earned $8.64 an hour. That was 1976. Adjusted for inflation, that's
equivalent to $42.42 today. No wonder the man's reluctant to flip
burgers or trim hedges for $9 an hour.
His friends have suggested selling his house and moving somewhere
smaller and cheaper, maybe renting for a while, but that's the last
thing he wants. It’s that self-respect again. He's already sold off one
motorcycle and various musical instruments, and he and Terri now skip
the big vacations that were part of their past life. Which isn't to say
that Rembold currently lives like a monk. He still has the big screen
in the basement, the DVD collection, the video-game systems for when the
grandkids visit, a life's worth of possessions from decades of earning
good money. "Why should you have to give up your home?" he wanted to
know. "It's so unbelievable to me that I don't even want to think about
it. I'm in denial."
A Lost Generation?
What's to be done for people like Rick Rembold? As in most economic
debates, the answer to this question divides economists and
policymakers. On the left are those who lobby for more aid to jobless
Americans, including another extension of unemployment insurance beyond
the present cut-off date of 99 weeks. (In normal times, laid-off workers
once got 26 weeks of unemployment insurance.) Some Democrats in the
Senate had hoped to extend unemployment insurance by another 20 weeks up
to 119 weeks, an effort spearheaded by Senator Debbie Stabenow
(D-Mich.) that ultimately failed last week in the face of Republican
opposition. That same camp supports a one-time “reemployment bonus,” a
lump-sum payment that unemployed workers would receive to reward them
for finding a new job and leaving the unemployment rolls.
Another idea gaining traction in policy circles is "wage insurance,"
in which the government would supplement the income of workers rehired
at lower-paying jobs. Consider Rembold who, in his prime, earned $25 an
hour. He says can't live on a $10-an-hour job, but if that were to
become $12 or $15 an hour, thanks to a government subsidy, he'd be much
more interested.
More conservative voices believe cutting jobless benefits -- a bitter
pill, to be sure -- will force people back into the workforce. The
Rembolds of America will then scramble harder and take those low-wage
jobs faster. Of course, those who can't find work at all will be left
adrift with no safety net. What's more, the cost of such cuts to
taxpayers might actually prove higher, economists note, because without
those benefits the jobless might instead apply for disability or other
support programs and give up the search altogether.
Ideally, of course, employers and governments should avoid widespread
layoffs altogether. One option sometimes suggested would be a
"work-share" program. Imagine a factory of 100 workers with a boss
looking to cut costs. Instead of laying off 25 workers, he would reduce
all of his workers' hours by 25%. The government would then step in to
fill the earnings gap. Think of it as the equivalent of collecting
unemployment before you're laid off, a preventive measure to avoid the
trauma -- to income, health, family -- of job loss.
None of this is likely to happen soon which is little consolation for
the long-term unemployed like Rembold. Unfortunately, there are few
proven solutions to their situation. Job retraining programs for
unemployed workers are all the rage these days, touted by Education
Secretary Arne Duncan, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, and President
Obama as a transition to a new line of work. But a 2008 study
commissioned by the Labor Department found minimal-to-no gains for
160,000 workers who went through retraining, concluding that the
"ultimate gains from participation are small or nonexistent."
In the end, facing an economy that may never again generate in such
quantity the sorts of "middle class" jobs Rembold was used to, what we
may be seeing is the creation of a graying class of permanently
unemployed (or underemployed) Americans, a genuine lost generation who
will never recover from the recession of 2008. As Mike Konczal and Arjun
Jayadev of the Roosevelt Institute, a left-leaning think tank, recently
wrote, unemployed workers today are more likely to abandon the
workforce than find work -- something never before seen in four decades'
worth of labor data. "These workers need targeted intervention," they
concluded, "before they become completely lost to the normal labor
market."
"All I Need Is One Chance"
I first noticed Rembold’s tic on Sunday, my last day in Indiana. Out
of nowhere, without provocation, he'd suddenly say things like "Man, I
just need a job," or "All I need is a chance," or "I wanna work, make
stuff with my hands." He’d been filling the lulls in our conversations
with these little outbursts, symptoms, I assumed, of the worry and
anxiety that never left his side. Which is why I called a few weeks
after my visit, hoping for good news.
And there was, after a fashion. Angie, his daughter, had ended up
sticking with Check$mart, much to his relief. But for him, the leads
were sparser than ever. "There's this neighbor here,” he said, “her
son's a shift manager at the Walmart, so he's gonna see what they might
have." He also mentioned an electronic wire and cable manufacturer with
openings in Bremen, a half-hour south. He'd recently applied there for
the third time this year. This time around, he went on, he planned to
march in and demand the interview he’d never gotten. "I mean, what's it
take to get in to see someone there?" he asked me.
Rembold doesn't have time on his side. Unlike the now-famous "99ers,"
the folks who received nearly two years' worth of unemployment
benefits, his will expire sometime this winter, short of the 99-week
mark. He's not sure what he'll do by then if he can't find work. Maybe
take one of those $8-an-hour jobs after all. For now, though, he's just
checking the job boards each morning, shipping off resumes and cover
letters, firing up the Suzuki, chasing leads.
I asked if he still had any hope left that something good would
happen. "I don't know," he replied. " 'Course if ya don't go, ya don't
know."
Andy Kroll is a reporter in the D.C. bureau of Mother Jones
magazine
and an associate editor at TomDispatch. He's always looking for new
stories in this economic downturn, and you can email him at akroll (at)
motherjones (dot) com. To catch him discussing the jobs crisis on
Timothy MacBain's latest TomCast audio interview, click here or, to download it to your iPod, here. This story was written with research support from the Investigative Fund at the Nation Institute.
Copyright 2010 Andy Kroll