Nearly 8 of Every 10 Jobs Lost Since 2007 Were Held by Men

I know this is an old article but I can't find a link to the 60 Minutes episode this weekend where they talked about this. I thought it was a fascinating fact: nearly 8 in 10 jobs lost by men since 2007 have been by men.

78% of the jobs lost in this recession have been lost by men, according to BLS statistics compiled by Heather Boushey, a senior economist at the Center for American Progress. (Men comprised only about 54% of the workforce going into the recession.)

That may end up making a woman the ****** breadwinner in more households. But something else even more unusual is also going on: Men are not merely becoming unemployed in greater numbers than ever before. They are actually dropping out of the labor ***** at greater rates than before, which is different.

The unemployment rate we hear so much about--now 8.5% across the U.S.--is measured as a percentage of those who are available for work and seeking it. (The definition is pretty strict--to be considered unemployed, you must have actively sought work in the previous four weeks, for instance by sending out a resume or contacting a potential employer.) But in addition to measuring the number of Americans who are employed and the number who are unemployed but seeking work, the BLS tallies a third category every month: the number of people who have withdrawn from the labor *****, meaning that they don't have a job and are no longer looking.

Every month, some people move from being unemployed to being out of the labor *****. In December of 2007, the BLS reported that 844,000 women and 652,000 men had moved into this "stopped looking" category in the preceding month. The gender gap between those numbers is in keeping with historical norms. "Traditionally when women have lost their jobs, they have been more likely to simply exit the labor *****," says Boushey. Often those women become full-time stay-at-home parents. "The social costs aren't as challenging as they continue to be for men."
But social costs or not, men are now doing the same thing. "What's striking about this recession is that the number of men who drop out of the labor ***** is about the same as for women. That's just not normal," says Boushey, who has written extensively on ****** and labor issues.

In March 2009, the BLS reported that 1,162,000 women and 1,238,000 men had shifted from "looking" to "stopped looking" in the preceding month. So not only are men and women now exiting the labor ***** at roughly equal rates, but if current trends continue, men will start doing so even more. The increase in the number of women dropping out from December 2007 to March 2009 was 38%. The increase in the number of men dropping out was 90%.

To be sure, the accelerating male drop-out rate may be due to men believing there is no work left in certain fields, rather than a burning desire to change diapers. Still, these numbers will likely have all kinds of ramifications over the long term, from transforming who does what in the ****** to remaking federal labor law. For now I'll just note that the recession seems to be kicking our seismic long-term shift in gender roles into high gear


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