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U.S. Recovery's 2-Year Anniversary Arrives With Little To Celebrate

 
First Posted: 07/01/11 06:33 PM ET Updated: 08/31/11 06:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- This is one anniversary few feel like celebrating.

Two years after economists say the Great Recession ended, the recovery has been the weakest and most lopsided of any since the 1930s.

After previous recessions, people in all income groups tended to benefit. This time, ordinary Americans are struggling with job insecurity, too much debt and pay raises that haven't kept up with prices at the grocery store and gas station. The economy's meager gains are going mostly to the wealthiest.

Workers' wages and benefits make up 57.5 percent of the economy, an all-time low. Until the mid-2000s, that figure had been remarkably stable -- about 64 percent through boom and bust alike.

Executive pay is included in this figure, but rank-and-file workers are far more dependent on regular wages and benefits. A big chunk of the economy's gains has gone to investors in the form of higher corporate profits.

"The spoils have really gone to capital, to the shareholders," says David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff + Associates in Toronto.

Corporate profits are up by almost half since the recession ended in June 2009. In the first two years after the recessions of 1991 and 2001, profits rose 11 percent and 28 percent, respectively.

And an Associated Press analysis found that the typical CEO of a major company earned $9 million last year, up a fourth from 2009.

Driven by higher profits, the Dow Jones industrial average has staged a breathtaking 90 percent rally since bottoming at 6,547 on March 9, 2009. Those stock market gains go disproportionately to the wealthiest 10 percent of Americans, who own more than 80 percent of outstanding stock, according to an analysis by Edward Wolff, an economist at Bard College.

But if the Great Recession is long gone from Wall Street and corporate boardrooms, it lingers on Main Street:

-- Unemployment has never been so high -- 9.1 percent -- this long after any recession since World War II. At the same point after the previous three recessions, unemployment averaged just 6.8 percent.

-- The average worker's hourly wages, after accounting for inflation, were 1.6 percent lower in May than a year earlier. Rising gasoline and food prices have devoured any pay raises for most Americans.

-- The jobs that are being created pay less than the ones that vanished in the recession. Higher-paying jobs in the private sector, the ones that pay roughly $19 to $31 an hour, made up 40 percent of the jobs lost from January 2008 to February 2010 but only 27 percent of the jobs created since then.

Kathleen Terry is one of those who had to settle for less. Before the recession, she spent 16 years working as a mortgage processor in Southern California, earning as much as $6,500 in a good month, a pace of about $78,000 a year.

But her employer was buried in the housing crash. She found herself out of work for two and a half years. As her savings dwindled, the single mother had to move into a motel with her three daughters.

They got by on welfare and help from their church and friends. Terry started taking a 90-minute bus ride to job training courses. Eventually, she found work as a secretary in the Riverside County, Calif., employment office. She likes the job, but earns just $27,000 a year. "It's a humbling experience," she says.

Hard times have made Americans more dependent than ever on social programs, which accounted for a record 18 percent of personal income in the last three months of 2010 before coming down a bit this year. Almost 45 million Americans are on food stamps, another record.

Ordinary Americans are suffering because of the way the economy ran into trouble and how companies responded when the Great Recession hit.

Soaring housing prices in the mid-2000s made millions of Americans feel wealthier than they were. They borrowed against the inflated equity in their homes or traded up to bigger, more expensive houses. Their debts as a percentage of their annual after-tax income rose to a record 135 percent in 2007.

Then housing prices started tumbling, helping cause a financial crisis in the fall of 2008. A recession that had begun in December 2007 turned into the deepest downturn since the Great Depression.

Economists Kenneth Rogoff of Harvard University and Carmen Reinhart of the Peterson Institute for International Economics analyzed eight centuries of financial disasters around the world for their 2009 book "This Time Is Different." They found that severe financial crises create deep recessions and stunt the recoveries that follow.

This recovery "is absolutely following the script," Rogoff says.

Federal Reserve numbers crunched by Haver Analytics suggest that Americans have a long way to go before their finances will be strong enough to support robust spending: Despite cutting what they owe the past three years, the average household's debts equal 119 percent of annual after-tax income. At the same point after the 1981-82 recession, debts were at 66 percent; after the 1990-91 recession, 85 percent; and after the 2001 recession, 114 percent.

Because the labor market remains so weak, most workers can't demand bigger raises or look for better jobs.

"In an economic cycle that is turning up, a labor market that is healthy and vibrant, you'd see a large number of people quitting their jobs," says Gluskin Sheff economist Rosenberg. "They quit because the grass is greener somewhere else."

Instead, workers are toughing it out, thankful they have jobs at all. Just 1.7 million workers have quit their job each month this year, down from 2.8 million a month in 2007.

The toll of all this shows in consumer confidence, a measure of how good people feel about the economy. According to the Conference Board's index, it's at 58.5. Healthy is more like 90. By this point after the past three recessions, it was an average of 87.

How gloomy are Americans? A USA Today/Gallup poll eight weeks ago found that 55 percent think the recession continues, even if the experts say it's been over for two years. That includes the 29 percent who go even further -- they say it feels more like a depression.

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- This is one anniversary few feel like celebrating. Two years after economists say the Great Recession ended, the recovery has been the weakest and most lopsided of any since the ...
WASHINGTON (AP) -- This is one anniversary few feel like celebrating. Two years after economists say the Great Recession ended, the recovery has been the weakest and most lopsided of any since the ...
WASHINGTON (AP) -- This is one anniversary few feel like celebrating. Two years after economists say the Great Recession ended, the recovery has been the weakest and most lopsided of any since the ...
WASHINGTON (AP) -- This is one anniversary few feel like celebrating. Two years after economists say the Great Recession ended, the recovery has been the weakest and most lopsided of any since the ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
05:09 AM on 07/06/2011
They are now calling it the NO JOBS recovery....and with commodities soaring who is kidding who? here is a short video which although humorous strikes to the core of the problem

Yet even as gas prices remain above $4 per gallon and the deficit balloons, Senate Republicans are working to defeat a plan that would eliminate $4.4 billion in tax breaks for the oil industry. That's Saunders and Barry Schiffman performing the voiceovers. Sounds effects are from freesound.org. —The Editors
click on link for video (this was me when I gassed up yesterday)

http://motherjones.com/media/2011/05/zina-saunders-tax-breaks-oil-companies
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Under Fed yet Fed Up
Always great distaste for both political parties
10:49 PM on 07/05/2011
...not quite shovel ready...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Drew Sargent
Born-again human here
09:17 PM on 07/05/2011
This is one of those unique Great Recessions. It has only affected the middle and poor classes. And you wonder why we are not seeing any solutions. Stop any limo, hijack any private jet, crash any lavish political junket and just ask the good folks in the 2% class if they feel the squeeze.

Yeah!

This BS recession that the elite brought down upon us is going to go on and on until we the serfs elect to obey. Their terms are in the headlines every week. You decide.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jcaunter
Profile: schizoid, INTJ
01:48 PM on 07/05/2011
But Obama and Bernanke are spending so much time and effort massaging the government statistics. How could the people be so thoughtless as to not run out and buy something big every time they see another of Obama's phony numbers?!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wbearl
Retired Manager Mechanical Operations
10:39 AM on 07/05/2011
If this was 1932 we would be in a Depression, but in the 1930's laws were passed that protected this country from the types of things that caused the Great Depression. The laws were designed to slow down a melt down so the Feds could react, it worked. Unfortunately the catalyst for a melt down is still there, the Feds haven't removed it, they could have but they haven't. It's called trust. No one trust anyone else and it is worse today than it was in 2008. The people with money to spend don't trust the Feds and many of the laws that have been passed in the last 2 years. Then as if that wasn't enough, those in power have launched a campaign to focus the blame for the sluggish economy on the people with the money to invest. There is an element in Washington DC that thrives on Class Warfare and it is to their advantage that the economy stays sluggish as long as it's politically profitable for them. Before the economy will change, Washington DC has to change. Washington DC has to quit playing partisan politics and do the job they were hired to do. Then everyone, including the voters have to accept the fact that this melt down didn't happen during Bush's administration or Jimmy Carter's administration, it has been simmering and building for 100 years, waiting for a gust of wind to flash. That gust happened in 2008.
08:03 AM on 07/05/2011
H-1b work visas is having a huge negative impact in my field, software engineering. Employer like Microsoft can import thousands of foreign workers from around the world into Redmond at the drop of a hat. The impact is that government and corporations conspire to drive down wages which increases profits for a few.

Sadly, both political parties fully support H-1b. And this is just one example of how markets are rigged against workers . There are many different ways. Free trade deals with places like communist China...how can you have free trade when the workers in China have no freedoms? Or look at how the US government harasses illegal immigrants and does nothing to punish the employers. And amnesty just makes the problem worse for American workers.

Sadly, the biggest problem are the American workers who still don't understand that neither party represents them.

Until we create new parties that truly represent the American people then nothing will change.
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bryanzth
Honest to Goodness USA Patriot!
05:22 PM on 07/05/2011
Can't fan you, since I already have. Faved of course!

BZ.
06:06 AM on 07/05/2011
It's 7 wars now that we know of! Ron Paul is our only hope, but with electronic voting machines we are already screwed!!!
07:32 PM on 07/04/2011
"...55 percent think the recession continues, even if the experts say it's been over for two years. That includes the 29 percent who go even further -- they say it feels more like a depression."

The so-called experts are wrong. The 29 percent are right. This is what a depression looks like. Until the government gets real with the American people, nothing will improve.
05:53 PM on 07/04/2011
(oh dont forget about government promised obligations like Medicare Medicaid, and social security thats got a hefty price tag)
05:53 PM on 07/04/2011
Recession never ended. Our debt is about the same as our gdp. we havent fixed any thing all stimuluses did was throw money at the problem and well make it worse, by raising our level of debt inflated of the dollar, which gave us a feeling of "growth". on top of all this when your gdp growth is smaller then the inflation rate, thats a problem. also our economy is about 70%+ consumer spending so when people loose jobs they cannot spend money, which would have made more jobs down the line (in retail, housing markets, and what ever). and the more people that dont have jobs, more go to their government for help which puts more strain on an already bleak situation. all in all we shouldn't have shipped jobs over seas. to benefit the pay checks for corporate owners, and to give us the ability to buy more useless stuff, because it cost less, but the products were of terrible quality. so loosing those manufacturing jobs, there are less people working and spending, less money the government is able to reap from taxes on wages. the next debt ceiling will eventually be approved we'll see a "growth" they will claim the economy is recovering we saved the day, then be back in the same boat when we gotta pay the bills. only it will get more and more severe. so basically were in for a hell of a ride
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graffitijoe
snowballs chance n SoCal
04:15 PM on 07/04/2011
Here's an interestring report released by the Obama administration stating that each job "created" by the stimulus cost

...wait for it...$278,000 ...that's each.

So if a person just got that money in one year they would be considered "rich" by this administration - wierd, huh?

http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/obama-s-economists-stimulus-has-cost-278000-job_576014.html
08:05 AM on 07/05/2011
The stimulus worked as Obama planned. Wall Street is doing very well.
05:44 PM on 07/05/2011
If the "stimulus worked as Obama planned" then Obama's plans are to bankrupt this
nation and drive the economy into the turlet. Some would call that tr3@s0n.
REDSTATEREFUGEE
Texan by birth ; Californian by choice
11:56 AM on 07/04/2011
I am beginning to see that there is no real difference between the Dems and the Repugs. It all boils down to a matter of retaining power.....not the fate of the American people. I so desperately want to see a viable, progressive third party candidate emerge in 2012, so that we can abandon this decades old charade of the Dems actually fighting for us. We already know how the Pubs care even less....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
atexasdem
Pointing out the foolishness of republican voters.
11:52 AM on 07/04/2011
A recession is when your neighbor loses his job and can't find another. A depression is when you lose your job and can't find another.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RMorr2002
08:10 PM on 07/05/2011
And recovery will start when obama loses HIS job!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
atexasdem
Pointing out the foolishness of republican voters.
11:30 PM on 07/05/2011
Recovery will start when people have the intelligence to quit blindly following orders and so called talking points and begin actually thinking for themselves.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MeinNH
Ooooo Silly Me
09:42 AM on 07/04/2011
Recovery? What recovery? Oh you mean the one for those executives that got a 23% increase in pay.....
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graffitijoe
snowballs chance n SoCal
04:17 PM on 07/04/2011
...or the recipents of the borrowed stimulus/slush fund money.
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bryanzth
Honest to Goodness USA Patriot!
05:24 PM on 07/05/2011
Yep. ;0)

BZ.
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
08:48 AM on 07/04/2011
"....economists say...." - please, where can I get some of those rose-colored glasses? Or are all these "economists" smoking that wacky-tobacky?