The
 May jobs report turned out to be an enormous disappointment, when 
the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported only 69,000 jobs gained on the 
payroll survey and the unemployment rate ticked up to 8.2 percent. The 
report also showed 49,000 downward revisions for the previous two 
months.
The
 truth is far worse. The rate of people participating in the labor force
 (actually working) is “near historic” lows, according to Investor’s 
Business Daily. Major news outlets from IBD, to CNN Money to The 
Washington Post have noticed this worrying trend. But the three 
broadcast networks have ignored this troubling news in 82 percent of 
stories that mentioned jobs. The same networks that spun good employment news negatively over and over again during President George W. Bush’s presidency.
Although
 the networks have taken little notice, other national news outlets have
 voiced concern. The Post explained how horrible the situation is in its
 Wonkblog May 4 saying, “If
 the same percentage of adults were in the workforce today as when 
Barack Obama took office, the unemployment rate would be 11.1 percent. 
If the percentage was where it was when George W. Bush took office, the 
unemployment rate would be 13.1 percent.”
The civilian labor force participation rate dropped to 63.6 percent in April -- the lowest since 1981. In
 the latest report it moved up a little, to 63.8 percent, but that still
 means there are still millions of people not working. On May 4, CNN 
Money wrote about the “86 million invisible unemployed,” invisible 
because people who haven’t looked for work in the past four weeks are 
not counted as unemployed. A “worrisome trend,” according to CNN Money, 
which estimated that as many as 36 million of those are of working age: over 25 and below 65.
“At
 this point, the labor market is worse than people realize because 
people are discouraged. Certainly, a large number of workers have given 
up on the job market,” Keith Hall, a senior research fellow at the 
Mercatus Center and former commissioner of the BLS told CNN. 
In
 82 percent (114 of 139) of stories about jobs on ABC, CBS and NBC news 
shows failed to say anything about the declining size of the labor force
 or even something generic about people giving up looking for work.
Networks Say Little About Workforce Dropouts, But Find ‘Positive Sign’ When People Return
People
 dropping out of the workforce wasn’t a major concern for the networks, 
but when people re-entered it in February that was deemed “a really 
positive sign.”
CBS
 “Evening News” anchor Scott Pelley spoke of “new evidence that hiring 
is real and picking up speed,” on CBS “This Morning” March 10. Speaking 
of the same February jobs report, “This Morning” co-anchor Rebecca 
Jarvis affirmed Pelley’s statement saying “The trends are solid.”
ABC
 also touted the February report. Speaking of the jobs “jolt,” ABC’s 
correspondent and anchor Dan Harris said on “World News” March 9 that 
“what is changing though, according to today’s report, people back on 
their feet half-a-million Americans who had given up altogether looking 
for a job, now back in the hunt. To you, it’s a really positive sign 
that people are coming off the sidelines?” Economist Diane Swonk 
answered that question “Absolutely!”
The
 network was still holding on to that optimism during the April 5 “World
 News” broadcast, when correspondent David Muir shared predictions of 
what the March jobs report would show the next morning. He said 
economists were estimating roughly 200,000 jobs and that they expected 
the unemployment rate to stay about the same “as more people now enter 
this force with hope.”
ABC
 reported the disappointing jobs report on April 6 and 7, but made no 
mention of the drop in participation. As it turned out, workers left the
 labor force in March as CNN Money reported on April 6; the unemployment
 rate fell because 164,000 workers left the job market. One NBC story 
and one CBS story about that BLS report did mention briefly that “fewer people were looking 
for work.”
Still,
 CBS “This Morning” managed to find an expert who wasn’t concerned by 
the March report. Anthony Mason pointed out on April 7 that “The economy
 has added more than eight hundred and fifty thousand jobs over the past
 four months, the best showing in two years. But after three straight 
months of adding two hundred thousand plus, March growth slowed sharply 
to just a hundred and twenty thousand.”
He
 then turned to Michael Darda, an economist with MKM Partners and asked,
 “This doesn’t ring alarm bells for you?” Darda replied, “It doesn’t 
because the other barometers of the labor market still look relatively 
healthy.” 
Since
 Jan. 1, the networks have found lots of reasons to talk about jobs and 
employment. There were positive stories about people pursuing 
non-traditional career options, starting their own businesses, and about
 job fairs and job placement programs. There were also downbeat stories 
about how difficult it has been for some people to find work (especially
 veterans), but there was very little reporting about the “near historic
 low” rates of participation and how much that might have to do with the
 economic situation.
Demographics or Economic Distress?
While
 it makes sense that the labor force would begin to decline as baby 
boomers are nearing retirement, many economic experts and some media 
outlets are concerned that a significant part of that decline “reflects”
 the weak labor conditions.
The
 Cleveland Fed wrote on May 8 that “Some of the decline in labor force 
participation has been expected, as the baby-boomer generation moves 
into the retirement. However, the recent magnitude of the decline is surprising and reflects in part the weak state of the current labor market.
If
 you look at people who should be working, people between 25 and 54, the
 decline shouldn’t be as severe. But the Cleveland Fed looked at this 
“less sensitive” age range and still found “steady declines in 
participation rates not only during the recession, but also during the 
recovery.” 
Investor’s Business Daily also expressed concern about those “prime” workers on June 4. David Hogberg wrote that “From
 mid-1987 until the Great Recession, the employment-to-population ratio 
of 25-to- 54-year-olds usually ranged from 78.5% to 80%. It never fell 
below 78.2% even during the 1990-91 and 2001 slumps.”
Long
 after the recession ended, “that ratio stands at just 75.7%,” Hogberg 
said. Why? He thinks many have give up, some has stayed in school 
because of “poor job prospects” and others have gone on disability. 
Many
 people have fallen out of the labor force in recent years and straight 
onto the disability rolls. A contributor to Forbes.com pointed out that 
they have grown by 1.5 million under Obama’s term for several reasons 
including relaxed standards of reporting and greater incentive due to 
the difficult economy. Concerned about the high growth, the author, Paul
 Roderick Gregory, asked “Have Americans suddenly become less health or 
more accident prone?” Rather than rising at the rate of population 
growth (4 percent), the number of people collecting disability has grown 20 percent in four years.
Many
 economists have been trying to determine how much of the labor force 
participation decline is demographic and how much is due to labor market
 conditions. Some Federal Reserve economists have estimated it is 
roughly half and half. Willem Van Zandweghe
 recently wrote in the Kansas City Fed Economic Review that roughly half
 of the decline in participation between 2007 and 2011 was due to 
cyclical (economic) factors. A paper from the Federal Reserve Bank of 
Chicago has also argued that half the decline is demographic, according to The Wall Street Journal.
In
 the news media, even the Washington Post admitted “part of the story is
 clearly that the labor force is shrinking because the bad economy is 
driving workers out …”
Regardless,
 the lack of network coverage is typical of coverage of bad economic 
news under Obama. Given the double standard for economic coverage (Bush 
vs. Obama or Obama vs. Reagan) it is is difficult to imagine the 
networks ignoring this story if a Republican was in the White House now 
instead of Obama.
Methodology
The
 Business and Media Institute examined all Nexis transcripts mentioning 
“job” or “employment” from Jan. 1, 2012, to June 4, 2012. Casual 
mentions of jobs as well as political stories that happened to mention 
jobs or unemployment were not included in this analysis.
Networks Barely Discuss ‘Hidden’ Jobless, That Even WaPo, CNN Notice
            June 14th, 2012 10:25 AM
          
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