| by
Yolanda K. Kodrzycki
May/June 2000
The combination of very low unemployment rates and
somewhat limited wage and salary pressures has called
into question our ability to measure labor market tightness.
One issue is the extent to which labor availability
is understated, given the existence of people who are
not actively looking for work but express interest in
working. This note examines the evidence on discouraged
and other marginally attached workers.
The author concludes that the number of discouraged
and other marginally attached workers is extremely low,
and their inclusion in an expanded measure of unemployment
is unlikely to change the conclusion that the current
jobless rate is the lowest in three decades. Marginally
attached workers are more concentrated than the unemployed
in demographic groups whose employment–population ratios
are low. As a group, they are less likely to become
employed or remain employed. She finds that the decline
in their number in recent years is due in large measure
to the success of unemployed workers in finding jobs.
Favorable economic conditions serve to limit the number
who drop out of the officially measured work force.
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