Gump42:
Your look is familiar but only part of your "name". I hope "42" isn't your birth year as that would make you even older than I am and that can't be good.
Unemployment statistics are complicated and subject to intense pushing and pulling by political people trying to manipulate an advantage for their gang. Here is a link to a brief discussion of the latest Unemployment Claims report by Mark Thoma, a very good economist at the University of Oregon:
http://moneywatch.bnet.com/economic-...to-500000/775/
There is a difference between "Insured unemployment", "Initial Claims for unemployment" and overall unemployment. The latter is determined by a continuing US Dept of Labor survey of households which asks how many "adults" 15-65 there are, whether they are working and if they are seeking a job if they are not working. Anyone seeking work who is not working is recorded as unemployed regardless of whether they have previously worked or for how long. "Insured unemployment" on the other hand is limited to people who have worked long enough before losing their job "due to no fault of their own" to qualify under the laws of the state in which they live. Such laws vary considerably. Initial claims are just how many people walked into an employment security agency office like the Texas Workforce Commission (or called the 1-800 line) to file an initial claim, which may or may not be approved, depending on whether they have sufficient wages in the statutorily
defined base period and what the reason for separation from their last employment was. If it is approved they join the ranks of the "insured unemployed", who constitute about a third of the total unemployed.
Meanwhile, behind the scenes, the "participation rate" is continually fluctuating as the percentage of adults who are working or seeking work changes. This doesn't get much publicity but it is profoundly important. The average American family income remained the same or increased slightly in real, inflation-adjusted terms, btween Nixon and Bush II largely because more and more married women joined the work force to provide a second household income despite the average working man's income remaining flat or actually declining in terms of purchasing power. Since the Boy Geniuses of Wall Street blew up the world economy in the last quarter of 2008 the percentage of Americans working and seeking work has fallen considerably. Some people describe these drop-outs as "discouraged workers" and add them back in to the unemployed to get a figure well over 10%. What is actually happening is not perfectly clear. It is possible the gray or underground economy is growing as the official economy shrinks. Probably most sex workers do not show up on official statistics, even as workforce participants.
At the high point of the Clinton prosperity that preceded the first Bush Recession the overall national unemployment rate was 3.9% and the insured unemployment rate about half of that. The good old days - they are gone now.
If you want more explanation you will have to be a little more specific about what it is you want explained.
Greymouse, longtime employment security professional, now retired