Nofsdad
Joined: 06 Jul 2003
Posts: 6727
Location: Central CA
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Posted: Tue Jul 01, 2008 4:43 pm Post subject: Massive Private and Government Sector Layoffs
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| With falling revenue from sales and income taxes, and property-tax declines looming, states, cities and towns have already laid off tens of thousands of government employees. The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, a public employees union, says about 45,000 government layoffs have been announced this year. |
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| There are nearly 20 million state and local government employees in the country. So a 1% decline in employment at cities, towns, schools and states would result in a job loss of almost 200,000 people, a much larger amount than we've seen from battered sectors such as automakers or home builders in the past two years. |
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| The effect of those layoffs will far outweigh any benefit of the economic stimulus package, much of which was already spent. We must use the word benefit loosely because government giving away money it does not have never produces any economic benefit |
Did anybody really buy that bullshit as any kind of "economic stimulus"? It never was anything more than a stupidly conceived attempt to divert attention from the impending crisis and try to convince the people that all they needed to do was spend more money THEY didn't have and the crisis would be averted.
Perfect illustration of the average IQ level in the current administration, eh?
Financial sector fares no better: In addition to a potential 200k public employees hitting the unemployment lines we have the following:
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Bank of America To Cut 7,500
Citigroup to cut 6,500
Bear Stearns cuts 9000
AG to lose 7000
Lehman Brothers to dump 6300
Bloomberg says there may be a total of Total of 175,000 Financial Sector Cuts Coming.
[list]The world's biggest financial firms may lose as many as 175,000 jobs by this time next year as Citigroup Inc. and other banks shed workers amid slowing revenue and billions in writedowns, executive recruiters say. |
I'm having trouble getting up much sympathy for any of that bunch since as far as I'm concerned they are the root cause of most of the problem but still, you have to add those numbers into the overall total.
And these are just job losses in the finance sector which is all the financial media cares about of course. The number of jobs already lost and in line to be cut in ALL OTHER sectors due to the ripple effect of the current economic situation also number well into the hundreds of thousands if not millions. The labor department better hope a LOT of people have their benefits run out and fall off the unemployment rolls real quick if they're going to keep up the same old song and dance in regard to unemployment, eh?
Will they still be trying to avoid using the "R" word to describe what's going on then just so the people causing the problem can suck the last few bucks possible out of the situation?
Probably.
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