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Third World America - Arianna Huffington [23]

By Root 560 0

Rebecca Admire is another of the more than eight million people who have lost their jobs since December 2007.55 A single mom with two kids, Admire was laid off from her job at the Family Guidance Center for Behavioral Healthcare in St. Joseph, Missouri. After several months of struggling to pay her rent, she invited her cousin and two children to move in with them and share costs. There are now eight people living in Admire’s two-bedroom house. The four children sleep in one bunk bed, two to a mattress. But with so many in the house, the utility bills have gone through the roof. “I cry every time a bill comes in the mail,” Admire says.

In some cases, entire towns are falling into permanent decline when their central industries disappear. Mount Airy, North Carolina, for example, which has a population of just 9,500, historically relied largely on the textile industry for jobs.56 But, as Paul Wiseman reported in a March 2010 piece in USA Today, one after the other, the city’s textile and apparel factories shuttered, shedding more than three thousand jobs between 1999 and 2010. It’s a trend bound to continue: According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, openings in textile and apparel manufacturing will nearly halve by 2018, as work is increasingly outsourced overseas and replaced by technological advances.

And in Mount Airy—the city where Andy Griffith grew up, and the inspiration for Mayberry, the epitome of small-town America for TV viewers for half a century—the transition has rattled an entire generation that had banked on the security of manufacturing jobs.57 “When you started work, you thought you’d be there until you retired,” Jane Knudsen, who began working in a textile mill in 1973, told USA Today. But Knudsen’s mill closed down, and now she works as a part-time cook at the local jail for two dollars less per hour. Another local, Steve Jenkins, opted to skip college and go straight into apparel manufacturing. He worked at Perry Manufacturing for more than thirty years, advancing through the ranks to earn a salary of $103,000 as director of purchasing. But Perry shut down in 2008. For Jenkins, who received no severance and had few other skills, life was suddenly upended.

“We were not prepared,” Mount Airy City Council member Teresa Lewis conceded.58 “We’ve had a huge loss of jobs in the textile industry. A lot of those people had devoted 30, 35 years to one particular company, and they found themselves in their early to mid-50s without a job or without the skills to go into something else.”

The aggregate effect of these stories—and tens of thousands more like them—is deeply troubling for our country. Through an enviable mix of jobs created by innovative American businesses and a national culture based on self-reliance, America has always had unemployment rates far lower than other developed nations. But this historic advantage is coming to an end. By the end of 2009, the unemployment rate among sixteen-to-twenty-four-year-olds was 19.1 percent.59 And 19.7 percent of American men aged twenty-five to fifty-four (prime working years) were unemployed—the highest figure since the Bureau of Labor Statistics began tracking this data in 1948.60

“Every downturn pushes some people out of the middle class before the economy resumes expanding,” wrote Peter Goodman in the New York Times in February 2010.61 “Most recover. Many prosper. But some economists worry that this time could be different. An unusual constellation of forces—some embedded in the modern-day economy, others unique to this wrenching recession—might make it especially difficult for those out of work to find their way back to their middle-class lives.… Call them the new poor: people long accustomed to the comforts of middle-class life who are now relying on public assistance for the first time in their lives—potentially for years to come.”

OPEN SEASON: SETTING A TRAP FOR THE MIDDLE CLASS

There are those in our country who look at the struggles of the middle class—mortgages underwater, foreclosure notices on the door, mounting credit card bills in the

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