11-26-2012
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/survey-americans-struggling-ends-meet-080033043.html
Americans struggling to make ends meet
Many Americans Living Paycheck To Paycheck
Forget saving money or paying down debt. The top financial priority for many Americans is simply staying afloat, according to Bankrate's November Financial Security Index. Nearly a third of Americans, 32 percent, say that just staying current or getting caught up on bills is their main concern right now.
There simply aren't enough jobs. Between high unemployment and stagnant wages, the sense that it is hard to get ahead these days is unshakeable. For example, in October, 2.4 million Americans were marginally attached to the workforce, meaning they were unemployed but haven't looked for work in the four weeks preceding the survey. Of the marginally attached workers, 813,000 were classified as discouraged, which means they have all but given up on finding a job. Meanwhile, 8.3 million people remain underemployed, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics employment report for October.
In addition, incomes are not keeping up with increases in the cost of living. Growth in hourly earnings has clocked in under the historical average inflation rate of 3.23 percent, according to a parsing of Bureau of Labor Statistics data from the Economic Policy Institute, or EPI.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/survey-americans-struggling-ends-meet-080033043.html
Americans struggling to make ends meet
Many Americans Living Paycheck To Paycheck
Forget saving money or paying down debt. The top financial priority for many Americans is simply staying afloat, according to Bankrate's November Financial Security Index. Nearly a third of Americans, 32 percent, say that just staying current or getting caught up on bills is their main concern right now.
There simply aren't enough jobs. Between high unemployment and stagnant wages, the sense that it is hard to get ahead these days is unshakeable. For example, in October, 2.4 million Americans were marginally attached to the workforce, meaning they were unemployed but haven't looked for work in the four weeks preceding the survey. Of the marginally attached workers, 813,000 were classified as discouraged, which means they have all but given up on finding a job. Meanwhile, 8.3 million people remain underemployed, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics employment report for October.
In addition, incomes are not keeping up with increases in the cost of living. Growth in hourly earnings has clocked in under the historical average inflation rate of 3.23 percent, according to a parsing of Bureau of Labor Statistics data from the Economic Policy Institute, or EPI.