I'm just wondering at what point do become a real problem.
It now stands at 7.2%, which is the worst it's been since I've been an adult. It's also got to be at least 2% worst than this time last year. Correction, .
And if I understand the situation correctly, underemployment (you have a job but you'd prefer one that's full-time instead of 32- hours a week) has risen about as much as unemployment. That means perhaps 5% of the country is earning less (sometimes far less) than they did at the same time last year.
All that said, 7% unemployment is not bad by most historical standards (5% is often considered to be a fundamental base level caused by job transitions/turnover rather than people being out of work for prolonged times). I'm more concerned what happens when these numbers get high enough that they really start amplifying recessionary trends we are already experiencing. Foreclosures were high this summer, but unemployment was under 6% then. What happens when unemployment hits 8%+ this summer?
Tim, you might consider linking to that Bureau of Labor Statistics chart I pointed to on the main page or something. In 2008, the unemployment statistics didn't really matter that much, but 2009 looks like a different story.