Greater number of men stay back home and their women go out working
Frank Walsh still pays dues to the International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers, but more than four years have passed since his name was
called at the union hall where the few available jobs are distributed. Mr.
Walsh, his wife and two children live on her part-time income and a small
inheritance from his mother, which is running out.
Sitting in the food court at a mall near his Maryland home, he
sees that some of the restaurants are hiring. He says he can’t wait much longer
to find a job. But he’s not ready yet.
“I’d work for them, but they’re only willing to pay $10 an
hour,” he said, pointing at a Chick-fil-A that probably pays most of its
workers less than that. “I’m 49 with two kids — $10 just isn’t going to cut
it.”
Working, in America, is in decline. The share of prime-age men —
those 25 to 54 years old — who are not working has more than tripled since the
late 1960s, to 16 percent. More recently, since the turn of the century, the
share of women without paying jobs has been rising, too. The United States,
which had one of the highest employment rates among developed nations as
recently as 2000, has fallen toward the bottom of the list.
economy
slowly recovers from the Great Recession, many of those men and women are eager
to find work and willing to make large sacrifices to do so. Many others,
however, are choosing not to work, according to a New York Times/CBS
News/Kaiser Family Foundation poll that provides a detailed look at the lives
of the 30 million Americans 25 to 54 who are without jobs.
Many
men, in particular, have decided that low-wage work will not improve their
lives, in part because deep changes in American society have made it easier for
them to live without working. These changes include the availability of federal
disability benefits; the decline of marriage, which means fewer men provide for
children; and the rise of the Internet, which has reduced the isolation of
unemployment.
At the
same time, it has become harder for men to find higher-paying jobs. Foreign
competition and technological advances have eliminated many of the jobs in
which high school graduates like Mr. Walsh once could earn $40 an hour, or
more. The poll found that 85 percent of prime-age men without jobs do not have
bachelor’s degrees. And 34 percent said they had criminal records, making it
hard to find any work.
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