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I.M.F. SAYS SOCIAL UNREST LIKELY ! #151967
09/14/2010 09:05 AM
09/14/2010 09:05 AM
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HUNTRKILR91 Offline OP
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HomeFinanceFinance TopicsFinancial CrisisIMF fears 'social explosion' from world jobs crisis
America and Europe face the worst jobs crisis since the 1930s and risk "an explosion of social unrest" unless they tread carefully, the International Monetary Fund has warned.

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Published: 11:00PM BST 13 Sep 2010

279 Comments

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Duration of unemployment in the US, Bureau of Labor Statistics. US long-term unemployed, Bureau of Labor Statistics figures.
"The labour market is in dire straits. The Great Recession has left behind a waste land of unemployment," said Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the IMF's chief, at an Oslo jobs summit with the International Labour Federation (ILO).

He said a double-dip recession remains unlikely but stressed that the world has not yet escaped a deeper social crisis. He called it a grave error to think the West was safe again after teetering so close to the abyss last year. "We are not safe," he said.


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IMF tells Europe to come clean on bank lossesA joint IMF-ILO report said 30m jobs had been lost since the crisis, three quarters in richer economies. Global unemployment has reached 210m. "The Great Recession has left gaping wounds. High and long-lasting unemployment represents a risk to the stability of existing democracies," it said.

The study cited evidence that victims of recession in their early twenties suffer lifetime damage and lose faith in public institutions. A new twist is an apparent decline in the "employment intensity of growth" as rebounding output requires fewer extra workers. As such, it may be hard to re-absorb those laid off even if recovery gathers pace. The world must create 45m jobs a year for the next decade just to tread water.

Olivier Blanchard, the IMF's chief economist, said the percentage of workers laid off for long stints has been rising with each downturn for decades but the figures have surged this time.

"Long-term unemployment is alarmingly high: in the US, half the unemployed have been out of work for over six months, something we have not seen since the Great Depression," he said.

Spain has seen the biggest shock, with unemployment near 20pc. Britain's rate has risen from 5.3pc to 7.8pc over the last two years, a slightly better record than the OECD average. This contrasts with the 1970s and early 1980s when Britain was notoriously worse. UK jobless today totals 2.48m.

Mr Blanchard called for extra monetary stimulus as the first line of defence if "downside risks to growth materialise", but said authorities should not rule out another fiscal boost, despite debt worries. "If fiscal stimulus helps avoid structural unemployment, it may actually pay for itself," he said.

"Most advanced countries should not tighten fiscal policies before 2011: tightening sooner could undermine recovery," said the report, rebuking Britain's Coalition, Germany's austerity hawks, and US Republicans. Under French socialist Strauss-Kahn, the IMF has assumed a Keynesian flavour.

The report skirts the contentious issue of whether globalisation lets companies engage in "labour arbitrage", locating plant in low-wage economies such as China to ship products back to the West. Nor does it grapple with the trade distortions caused by China's currency policy, except to call on "surplus countries" to play their part in rebalancing.

The IMF said there may be a link between rising inequality within Western economies and deflating demand.

Historians say the last time that the wealth gap reached such skewed extremes was in 1928-1929. Some argue that wealth concentration may cause investment to outstrip demand, leading to over-capacity. This can trap the world in a slump.


Real courage is not found in the willingness to Risk Death! But in the willingness to stand Alone if necessary, Against the Ignorant and Disapproving HERD !
Re: I.M.F. SAYS SOCIAL UNREST LIKELY ! #151968
09/14/2010 11:32 AM
09/14/2010 11:32 AM
Joined: Mar 2002
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A 105-11FF Somewhere in the C...
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coydog Offline
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This line is way off.
Quote
The study cited evidence that victims of recession in their early twenties suffer lifetime damage and lose faith in public institutions.
I don't see getting a wake up call when your still young enough to recover to be a lifetime of damage. And loss of faith in public institutions can only be a good thing.


"State a moral case to a ploughman & a professor. The former will decide it as well, & often better than the latter,
because he has not been led astray by artificial rules."
Re: I.M.F. SAYS SOCIAL UNREST LIKELY ! #151969
09/14/2010 12:15 PM
09/14/2010 12:15 PM
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Just because we in our early twenties have lost faith in the IMF and its master does not mean we have lost faith in public institutions.

Re: I.M.F. SAYS SOCIAL UNREST LIKELY ! #151970
09/15/2010 07:15 PM
09/15/2010 07:15 PM
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I lost faith in public institutions while I was still a fully employed (3 jobs), middle-class teenager.

The IMF is one of the institutions which is fully culpable for our current situation.

They are ratcheting up the fear in order to justify the "institutional violence" which they are conjuring in order to quell mass unrest.

Not this time...


I would gladly lay aside the use of arms and settle matters by negotiation, but unless the whole will, the matter ends, and I take up my battle rifle, and thank God that He has put it within my grasp.

Audit Fort Knox!

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