A Year or More: The High Cost of Long-Term Unemployment

Update: January 2011

A Year or More: The High Cost of Long-Term Unemployment

As of December 2010, 30 percent of the 14 million Americans who were unemployed had been jobless for a year or more, according to data produced by the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics. That percentage is the highest since World War II, and it translates into more than 4.2 million people, roughly equivalent to the total population of Kentucky.

The problem of long-term unemployment has grown worse in the last year, even as the economy has improved.  A Year or More: The High Cost of Long-Term Unemployment, a report released by the Pew Fiscal Analysis Initiative last April, found that in December 2009, 23 percent of the 14.7 million unemployed had been out of work for a year or longer. (The long-term unemployment rate has not increased since August 2010, as Pew found in the October 2010 Addendum.)

America’s Overdose Crisis
America’s Overdose Crisis

America’s Overdose Crisis

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America’s Overdose Crisis

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Learn the Basics of Broadband from Our Limited Series

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How does broadband internet reach our homes, phones, and tablets? What kind of infrastructure connects us all together? What are the major barriers to broadband access for American communities?

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What Is Antibiotic Resistance—and How Can We Fight It?

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Antibiotic-resistant bacteria, also known as “superbugs,” are a major threat to modern medicine. But how does resistance work, and what can we do to slow the spread? Read personal stories, expert accounts, and more for the answers to those questions in our four-week email series: Slowing Superbugs.