Friday
Oct032008
Congress works to stall unemployment
Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) said that the United States is in "an unbearable financial situation" in a Joint Economic Committee Hearing. She said the job market has been "deteriorating" for the last year.
Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Keith Hall said that jobs have been lost for nine consecutive months. According to Hall, a recession is realized after nine or 10 consecutive months of job losses. He said that the biggest job losses have been in industries such as manufacturing, retail, and construction. Hall said the U.S. currently has "a broadly weak labor market." He also said said that the many jobs that have been shipped overseas "did not return."
The September Jobs Report released today, showed that 159,000 jobs were lost this September, the highest monthly loss in five years and the unemployment rate is at 6.1 percent. The report also said that while wages have increased by 3.4 percent in the last year, inflation has increased by 5.4 percent.
Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Keith Hall said that jobs have been lost for nine consecutive months. According to Hall, a recession is realized after nine or 10 consecutive months of job losses. He said that the biggest job losses have been in industries such as manufacturing, retail, and construction. Hall said the U.S. currently has "a broadly weak labor market." He also said said that the many jobs that have been shipped overseas "did not return."
The September Jobs Report released today, showed that 159,000 jobs were lost this September, the highest monthly loss in five years and the unemployment rate is at 6.1 percent. The report also said that while wages have increased by 3.4 percent in the last year, inflation has increased by 5.4 percent.
Pizza, beer, debt
House Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit.
Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) said that college students are targeted
by credit companies and likely to end up with high debt. She
continued, saying students are often rewarded for releasing their
personal information to credit card companies with items like t-shirts
and pizza.
According to Christine Lindstrom of the U.S. Public Interest Research
Group, decreased federal and state funding for education causes
students to pay for larger shares of their education and often
necessitates credit cards. Lindstrom said her organization is working
to educate college students on financial responsibility and how to be
a good consumer with a credit card. Lindstrom's organization also
wants to give students the option to prevent universities from
releasing their names to credit card companies.
Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) reminded the committee that college
students are adults and though they often use credit cards for
inappropriate purchases, Congress should not deny them their right of
economic freedom. Hensarling said he fears that a solution would have
unintended damaging effects and suggested toughening anti-fraud laws
that prevent minors from being given credit cards. Brett Thurman, the
student-body president of the University of Illinois at Chicago,
stated that students' issues are directly linked to high educational
costs and that credit card companies should not be able to give cards
to students that have no annual income.