Tag Archives: BLS

An Armed Police Presence in Every School

Police officers, image courtesy of Bureau of Labor Statistics

Police Officers, Image courtesy of BLS.

 

Following the December 14, 2012 killing of 20 children, four teachers, the principal and psychologist in Sandy Hook Elementary School, and his mother by Adam Lanza in Newtown, Connecticut (CNN),  Wayne LaPierre (bio) of the National Rifle Association gave a “Press Conference” (in which the Press were not allowed to ask any questions). He suggested that the Federal Government hire police officers for every school in the USA (full transcript: Daily Caller, Washington Post).

Left unsaid is how many new police officers we would need, and what it would cost to hire, train, and equip them. Continue reading

Unemployment Drops Slightly in January, 2012

In Jobless Rate Fell To 8.3% in January, 2012, as, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, approximately 243,000 new jobs were added in the economy, here. This is good. But an unemployment rate of 8.3% means there are 13 million people out of work and looking for jobs. That doesn’t count the millions that are out of work and not even looking. We need 13 million new jobs – 52 months of 243,000 new jobs per month.

On NPR’s Morning Edition, Friday, Feb. 3, 2011, here, Renee Montagne interviewed Yuki Noguchi on the Bureau of Labor Statistics January jobs report, the Employment Situation Summary, here, on jobs in the economy. Early on, at about 1 minute 30 seconds, Ms. Montagne asked, “What about government jobs?”

Ms. Noguchi replied, “Government job loss is minimal.”

This is a critical piece of the puzzle. Toward the end of the segment, at about 3 minutes, 14 seconds, Ms. Noguchi said “let’s say the hiring stays at this level, with nearly 13 million people unemployed, it would take nearly four years for all those people to find jobs. And that number doesn’t count people who are not even looking.”

President Roosevelt and John Maynard Keynes proved that during economic times such as these, while business owners are capable of hiring, they are reluctant to hire because they are reluctant to risk capital. The only entities that are both willing and able are agencies of the government and not-for-profits such as schools, hospitals, etc. This is because they serve their stakeholders, not their stockholders.

Keynes wrote his seminal General theory on Employment, Money, and Interest During the Depression. He looked at the classical theory which said, essentially, the Depression can’t be happening, and at the empirical data which said “It is happening” and concluded that if the theory is out of sync with the facts, then the theory must be flawed. His theory is described by Paul Krugman, here, and Aaron Schwartz, here.