Government regulations are crippling businesses, and nowhere is that fact more apparent than the latest labor statistics: the labor force participation rate remained at 62.6 percent last month, a 38-year low. In addition, the real unemployment rate -- the rate that measures Americans too discouraged to seek jobs and those working part-time -- was 10.4 percent.
The Washington Free Beacon Reports:
A record 93,770,000 Americans 16 or older did not participate in the nation’s labor force in July, and the labor force participation rate remained at 62.6 percent, a 38-year low, according to data released Friday from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
The 93,770,000 Americans not in the labor force are those individuals who did not have a job and did not actively seek one in the past four weeks. This measure increased by 144,000 individuals over the month.
The participation rate, the percent of the population who participated in the labor force by either having a job or actively seeking one in the past four weeks, remained unchanged from June to July at 62.6 percent. This metric hasn’t been this low since October 1977, when it was 62.4 percent—a span of 38 years. [...]
The ‘real’ unemployment rate in July, or the U-6 measure, was 10.4 percent, which dropped slightly from the 10.5 percent it was in June. Some democrats such as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.) and Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen have said that this measure is more representative of the labor market because it accounts for discouraged workers and those working part time instead of full time for economic reasons.
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When will our federal government realize that foisting more regulations on businesses is the least effective means of economic recovery? Forcing businesses to pay for their full-time employees’ healthcare doesn’t give more people healthcare -- it gives fewer people full-time jobs.
A Convention of States can significantly limit federal regulations by proposing constitutional amendments that shrink the size and jurisdiction of Washington bureaucracies.