Unemployed wait longer and longer for jobs
Andrea Orr
March 10, 2010
By Andrea Orr
The current jobs crisis is unusually severe not only for the high level of unemployment, but also for the amount of time it is taking workers to find new jobs. Today, the median length of time a laid-off worker spends unemployed is almost five months, longer than any other time on record. The Figure tracks the median duration of unemployment since the Bureau of Labor Statistics began keeping records in 1967. The median 19.4 weeks that laid-off workers spent unemployed in February has more than doubled from a median of 8.4 weeks at the start of the recession in December 2007. Although it typically takes longer to find a job when jobs are scarce, past periods of high unemployment, such as 1983, corresponded to median unemployment spells of 9 to 12 weeks.

By contrast, the almost 20 weeks it is now taking unemployed workers to find jobs, means that many on the higher end of that range will exhaust the standard 26 weeks of unemployment benefits before they find work. Although Congress has passed several extensions of additional emergency benefits for the long-term unemployed, the latest extension passed earlier this month lasts for only 30 days. By the end of March, without another extension, 200,000 workers will lose their benefits each week.
 
More Snapshots
- Jobs ... but low pay
- Another challenge for the unemployed: Public library budget cuts
- State and local job losses threaten recovery
- Without federal intervention, unemployment would be near 16%
- Another consequence of the recession: Rising federal budget deficits
- Corporate profits have recovered, but job market still depressed
- Running out of steam
- Free Trade Agreement with Korea will cost U.S. jobs
- Another day, one less dollar
- Older men face longer job searches
- Recession takes a slice out of retirement savings
- Unemployment spells in Michigan and South Carolina are the longest in the nation
- Many jobless can not collect unemployment benefits
- Trading test anxiety for job market jitters
- Women now hold close to half of all jobs
- Americans work longer
- Small group takes large slice of capital income
- At the top: Soaring incomes, falling tax rates
- Counting the jobs lost to China
- Health insurance for more Americans
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