Today, Dr. Krugman has a wonderful op-ed about the growing acceptance of high levels of unemployment by our top policy makers:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/02/opinion/02krugman.html?ref=opinionIt's a good read. What Dr. Krugman ignores is that this has all been done before to the African American community in particular. Soon after African Americans finally won the legal right to end job discrimination, our industrial sector began to die off in the 1970s and into the 1980s. Factories began to disappear in major urban hubs like NYC, Philly, Boston, LA, Chicago, etc. African Americans were left living in areas for which there were no jobs, and the UE rate skyrocketed higher.
Back then, as is happening now, top policy makers were not concerned about the economic plight of African Americans in the inner cities. We were conditioned as a nation to accept it, and blame the social pathologies of the inner city African Americans-- teenage pregnacies, unwed mothers, drugs, gangs-- for their plight. In the end, we just came to accept that there were people who would forever be on the outskirts of the larger American economy.
Today, that conditioning is being applied to a larger group of Americans. Instead of African Americans being left in hollowed out urban centers, it's IT workers who are left in pockets of America without jobs. In addition to racial discrimination, there's now open age discrimination.
Career professionals who've been unemployed for a year or more are now experiencing what life was like for those inner city African Americans who were also were unemployed for long periods of time.
Just like this country wrote off inner city African Americans in the 1980s, we are doing the same with a broader class of Americans today.