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    The Glum and the Restless: How recent grads’ struggles could hurt Obama

    By Jim Tankersley
    National Journal

    Here's a fact that should give economists—and maybe President Obama's political team—heartburn: Two years after the Great Recession officially ended, job prospects for young Americans remain historically grim. More than 17 percent of 16-to-24-year-olds who are looking for work can't find a job, a rate that is close to a 30-year high. The employment-to-population ratio for that demographic—the percentage of young people who are working—has plunged to 45 percent. That's the lowest level since the Labor Department began tracking the data in 1948. Taken together, the numbers suggest that the U.S. job market is struggling mightily to bring its next generation of workers into the fold.

    This is a dangerous proposition, economically (for the United States as a whole) and politically (for the president).

    As The Atlantic's Don Peck wrote last year, citing a litany of research from Yale University's Lisa Kahn, college graduates who enter the labor force during a recession make significantly less money—in their first year and over the course of their careers—than grads who walk into an economic boom. Workers stuck in the unemployment line for an extended period risk watching their skills atrophy and face increasing difficulty finding new jobs. That's particularly true, though, for people waiting and waiting and waiting to land their first job. The longer a whole batch of fledgling workers sits waiting to be hired, the more the economy risks losing young employees with valuable, high-end skills at a time when global competition is increasingly fierce.

    PICTURES: Biggest Stories from the First Half of 2011

    Snowballing youth unemployment feeds social unrest. Exhibit A is the Middle East. Exhibit B is Europe's periphery; in such countries as Spain, Greece, and Croatia, more than one in three young people is unemployed, a problem that The Economist magazine warned this week is "as great a challenge for these governments as protecting their tottering banks and slashing their budget deficits."

    Not surprisingly, polls suggest that America's young people have grown more pessimistic about the economy and their own future fortunes. Generation Opportunity, a nonpartisan, nonprofit youth-outreach group headed by former Bush administration official Paul Conway, compiled polling data this summer showing decayed economic confidence among the so-called millennials: More than half say that the United States is seriously on the wrong track, and a similar number say they are not optimistic about the nation's economic future. More than half also assert that they're not confident that the country will be the global economic leader in 10 years. More than three-quarters say that, given the current state of the economy, they have delayed or will delay buying a home, paying down student debt, obtaining more education, saving for retirement, changing jobs or cities, getting married, or making some other major life decision.

    ANALYSIS: Why This Default Debate Is Different

    Young voters stampeded to the polls for candidate Obama in 2008, topping their 2004 turnout by more than 3 million and breaking, 2-to-1, in his favor. A drop in youth participation, or a shift toward a GOP candidate, could complicate Obama's reelection dramatically.

    Generation Opportunity's pollster, Kellyanne Conway, who has worked for several national GOP politicians in the past, says that young voters will be tougher on Obama in 2012 than they were in 2008. "The big question for young people [in 2008] was, 'How am I going to help you make history?' " says Conway, who is not related to the group's president. "The big question from young people today is, 'How are you going to help me find a good-paying job?' " This time, she adds, "they're looking for tangibles."

    PICTURES: Notable Deaths of 2011

    Conway's polling suggests that young voters could sympathize with a Republican message on cutting federal spending and the budget deficit. Three-quarters of millennials want to see federal spending reduced, she says, and three in five want to reduce the deficit through spending cuts rather than tax increases. Two-thirds say that Social Security dollars are safer "under your pillow" than with the government. Paul Conway, the group's president, says that's "fair warning" to Obama about how young voters view his policies.

    Other polls suggest more-favorable attitudes toward the president. In a late-June Gallup survey, 56 percent of Americans ages 18 to 29 approved of Obama's performance, the highest approval rating of any age bracket. Team Obama sounds unconcerned about losing young voters. Campaign officials note that thousands more of them applied to be summer campaign organizers this year than did in 2008. "In addition to what he has already accomplished on issues of importance to them—like establishing a tax credit to provide tuition relief to students and extending health insurance coverage to young adults up to the age of 26—young Americans have seen the president bring the economy back from the brink of depression and secure investments in education, research and development, and clean energy that are creating jobs today that will remain globally competitive in the future," campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt said in an e-mail.

    PICTURES: Betty Ford Through the Years—from Caribbean Fishing to the White House

    Obama and Republicans alike should pay particular attention to youth optimism about the direction of the economy. In 2008, exit polls showed that 54 percent of young voters believed that the economy would improve over the next year, compared with 47 percent of the rest of the electorate. Obama probably needs millennials to be similarly upbeat in 2012. In other words, it's all about confidence—like so much else in the economy these days.

    Visit National Journal for more political news.

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    2,112 comments

    • Eric  •  10 mths ago
      Almost everyone I know in engineering (I'm Civil Engineering), finance and accounting at University of Maryland who aren't going to grad school have jobs. Unfortunately most kids here, and i assume across the country, decided to take the easy way out of college and do some form of humanities, which almost guarantees them unemployment after college. Then they go and blame it on Obama for their own shortcomings. You gotta put in work for your job.
      • Jim 10 mths ago
        You have a very limited perspective. New grad vets and dentists are finding it very difficult to find work sufficient to pay loans. Trying to blame 'humanities' as being somehow less worth a paycheck is indicative of a limited intellect. Asberger's? or ass burger?
      • Kuma 10 mths ago
        Its kind of hard to disagree with him when you know its true. I just graduated and got a job and I'm an engineer. In fact, most of my friends who ARE finance, accounting, health care found jobs. However, the people in liberal arts sorry I haven't heard of them getting jobs in any fortune 500 company.
    • Flying_Bears_Rule!  •  10 mths ago
      UC Tuition up another 9+ percent! My kid hasn't stepped one foot on the campus and tuition has increased 17% since she started her senior year! Awesome!
      • I dont think so.. 10 mths ago
        I am about to graduate (hopefully, next semester) and they just cut all the aid package I was receiving while at the same time raised tuition cost by $400. I don't understand what the reasoning is behind that.
    • rationalist  •  10 mths ago
      Obama or anyone else can't fix in 4 years (possibly never) the disaster left by the unprecedented and mostly unnecessary spending by 8 years of the Bush administration. From 2002 to 2009 the federal debt went from $6,198B to $10,413B and some have the idiocy to blame this economic mess on Obama?!!!!
      • Dave Dixon 10 mths ago
        Some rationalist you are - the problem is Bush's spending but not Obama's attempt to solve that problem by spending at a far higher rate.
      • Aimes24 10 mths ago
        Exactly Dave! Rationalist, NOBODY blames Obama on what happened before took office!!!!!!!! It is what HIS!!!!!!!!!!! POLICIES, and HIS!!!!!!! SPENDING has done in the last almost three years. You people are so rediculous, you wonder where the terms for Obama come. "The Messiah" "The annointed" so on. You people (supporters) act as if he can NEVER do a wrong thing ever- SHEEPLE- bbbaaa, bbbaaa.
      • Mike 10 mths ago
        Obama is also the one proposing the rather large defecit reduction package that invloves both spending cuts and increased revenues by closing corperate tax loop holes. A package that requires both sides to compromise party and idealogy to be passed. Guess which side refuses to compromise and reduce the debt... ahhh the rebublicans.. the "fiscally conservative" party. LOL
    • FearTheBeard  •  10 mths ago
      Thats why more young people are going to the military which I am thinking of doing.
      • Godly 10 mths ago
        stupid move unless you have a college education. Don't go unless you're an officer!
      • E and L 10 mths ago
        ROTC!
      • LOL 10 mths ago
        Good luck getting in... They are all at or very near capacity... which means you'll have to be an extra exceptional candidate just for the recruiter to look at you. They want baccalaureate degrees in specific, military related fields or GTFO. .
    • Debra  •  10 mths ago
      My daughter just graduated with her PhD in Chemistry from Tulane University and is finding the job market slim. Her best offer has been to work in Berlin, Germany. Why is America letting our best and brightest young people leave the country for work???
    • uub  •  10 mths ago
      Don't need another election to impeach this foreign impostor.
    • GolferJ  •  10 mths ago
      The great savior (NOT) is a lieing #$%$ and he and his buddy dems could care less about anyone but themselves. This country is real bad shape and they are doing nothing to help or correct the problems. We need to get his sorry #$%$ out of office as fast as we can.
      • Ryan 10 mths ago
        As opposed to the republicans who held the government hostage in order to get tax cuts for the top 1% of the nation?
    • Marcus  •  10 mths ago
      A recession is when your neighbor loses his job. A depression is when you lose yours. And recovery is when OBAMA LOSES HIS!
    • EJ  •  10 mths ago
      stop spending billions on the fake US created wars on terro and we would not be in this mess. That is the root of the whole problem. Money laundering 100's of billions to the war contracts and wars themselves. Sickening
    • Flying_Bears_Rule!  •  10 mths ago
      I believe that not paying your student loans, credit card balances, car loans and mortgages is acceptable. Just wait for the Gov't to let the debt go, private lenders to be bailed out and ultimately just shrug it off as "live and learn". This is yet another example of the lack of smarts, the lack of responsibility, the lack of parenting....and overall disregard for personal responsibility that is imploding this country. Believe it or not: you are not entitled to anything.
    • Sara  •  10 mths ago
      The Great Recession actually ended? you could have fooled me!
    • Vincent  •  10 mths ago
      I'm 21, and on the verge of starvation and homelessness because I can't find a job (and believe me, it's not from a lack of trying). Somehow, though, I don't really feel like that is Barrack Obama's fault...
    • Silat  •  10 mths ago
      Getting drunk for four years at Party State U does not mean much these days. I work with a girl (Penn State graduate) who could not have the slightest conversation about the civil war. You want jobs? It all starts with producing things, you know....MANUFACTURING something. If I sell you a hamburger from my restaurant and you sell me siding.... we have created no wealth we simply relocated it...like a hamster moving it's food to the other side of the cage. Our government is regulating our factories out of business.
    • stevem  •  10 mths ago
      My interest in politics over the years has mostly been centered over the national defense differences between the Republicans and Democrats. But beginning with the financial collapse of 2008, I’ve become more and more interested in economic policy.
      I was appalled by the content of what became the ‘stimulus’ program signed in the first few months of Obama’s administration. Its content was designed by Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi and was mostly a reward to Democratic party pet causes.
      But the country was in trouble so conceptually I supported a large (if real) stimulus program. I sent Email after Email to the White House and my states (sadly 100 percent northeast and liberal) congressional delegation saying that if a large stimulus package was needed for the economy that make it nothing but spending on infrastructure (you know roads, bridges, pipes, tunnels).
      The generally accepted figure is that 1 billion spent on infrastructure creates 30,000 jobs2. So using simple math, 787 * 30000 = 23,610,000 jobs should have been created.
      And what did the Obama brag about just this week, the (now 821 billion dollar) stimulus program created 2.4 million jobs5. Gee, is this a factor of 10 lower than the calculation of what would have been created if spent on infrastructure?? And if we use simple math again,
      787,000,000,000/2,400,000 = 327,917 dollars per job.
      Hmmm….perhaps he should of created 4.8 million jobs at 160,000 per job.
      Infrastructure spending would also have left us with a base from which future economic growth could occur (much like the interstate highway system in the 50’s and 60’s).
      I never believed the arguments that the infrastructure projects had to be shovel ready for them to have an immediate effect on employment. All it needed was the will to do them. Look at the I-87 Bridge collapse in Minneapolis-St. Paul3. The wreckage removed and a new bridge designed and built in 13 months. Surely an unanticipated – not shovel ready project. A similar story is found in the fire on the Bay Bridge in California. The MacAurthur Maze repair to the bay bridge was accomplished in 26 days4.
      What non-infrastructure spending did the nation as a whole get1;
      288 Billion in tax cuts.
      90 Billion aid to states for medicare
      24 Billion individual healthcare aid
      48 Billion individual aid
      72 Billion Labor and volunteering, healthcare and social services, education, social security
      6 Billion “government”
      54 Billion aide to states
      This tally, nearly 600 billion out of the 787 billion, merely supported state and local government spending during the recession induced reduction in state and local tax intakes. If the recession had ended rapidly, state coffers would be recovering, but one sees the problems that states and cities are having now that their stimulus band-aid is being in removed and the recession is still in high gear. One can only wonder how much better we’d be if we were in the middle of a 787 billion dollar infrastructure building boom.
      The 20 – 25 dollar a week income tax decrease included in it had no interest for me (and in my Emails I requested that no tax break be included in the package). It would not affect my spending habits. And for those people for whom this small tax break would make a difference, I figured that it would be spent for necessities at Walmart buying imported products.
      And of portion of the stimulus spending that was supposedly ‘infrastructure’. Well I received a 50 dollar stimulus funded energy efficiency ‘green’ rebate on an air conditioner that I bought. The only problem is that it was made IN CHINA!!!!
      And for the future, I just 5 minutes ago watched Obama talking about the June 9.2 percent unemployment number. In his speech, he bemoaned the out of work construction workers. Where was this thinking when the goodies were being stuffed inside the stimulus program?
      Well the nation is now focused on debt reduction so they’ll be no new large infrastructure spending. And quite frankly, my gut
    • SE  •  10 mths ago
      The sad thing is most young college age kids will still vote Obama because they cant see past his stances on gay marrige etc. and realize he is ruining this country!!
    • Kelly P  •  10 mths ago
      I feel all the attacks on President Obama, the relentless slant of the media , the relentless persucution by the Republicans,the constant derogatory remarks, never saying any good about him, are a result of the continuing presence of racism in our society, we just cant stand for a black man to succeed .By the way this was written by a white male born in Mississippi at the highth of segregation and racism born in 1949. Im ashamed of this country for doing this to this man
    • William  •  10 mths ago
      I hope these recent grads are aware of the 7 job proposals stopped by the Congressional Republicans and that they even refused to limit tax cuts for corporations that shipped jobs out of the country. Now that's where the real problem lies.
    • Flying_Bears_Rule!  •  10 mths ago
      This article hits on Hussein's core campaign message from the past: HOPE.
      There isn't any. College children who are now young "adults" (cough) who voted for the slick sounding black dude are now realizing (again) that they were naive and ignorant teenager and young people and that social media, catchy phrases and colorful posters were all used to maniuplate as much as TV commercials selling Trix cereal.
    • TenKate1098  •  10 mths ago
      IT and health, if your degrees are not in either....well good luck and dont worry direct loans is very understanding on late student loan payments.....well at first they are....
    • TenKate1098  •  10 mths ago
      this is not a depression. dude drive by a walmart at any day or time. go by mc donalds, still rush hour every morning. you idiots get so dramatic. do you see soup kitchens shanty towns full of homeless? go look up the great depression and look at what those people went through. for god sake all of you still have internet access you retards how bad is it really? is it a depression or is your consumer #$%$ just inconvenienced having to skip mcdonalds once a week??? SHUT UP

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