OverVolt
Lifer
- Aug 31, 2002
- 14,278
- 89
- 91
More women are in the workforce now so the employment rate numbers are worse than in the 70's. I'm not saying its a bad thing, I don't care personally. Its just the facts. One of my Anatomy teachers originally got a bachelors in nursing because in the 60's and 70's it was the only way to get your foot in the door in academia as a woman. In reality what she wanted to do was work in a research lab, which in the 80's paid around $20/hr and she did this for a number of years. These days college students are jumping over each other to do it for free so their name can be a foot note on a research paper and their resume. Which is why these days she was teaching.In the 1970s people bought a car and kept it for years like 6 years on average I believe. You did not have people perpetually leasing automobiles and luxury vehicles were actually a rare sight. Now you will see the people driving Mercedes and bmws quite a bit.
Also people did not borrow or spend no where near as much as you see today. Nor did you see people buying McMansions with 5 bedrooms for a family of 3.
Back then the regular working guy lived in a modest rambler or ranch style home, about 900-1300 square feet. And the kids shared one room, mom and dad slept in the other room.
People live a much more modest lifestyle in the 70s and a lot of families had single earners ie the dad and mom stayed home.
This is why the participation of the labor force was smaller back then.
So If we are indeed seeing a labor force bubble correction, does this mean people will spend and live like the 1970s?
That would be the last thing the elites such as the kock brothers would want to see.
At some point something is definitely going to give way.
The whole "get a bachelors in nursing to get your foot in the door of academia" is actually really common with the older woman baby boomer cohort. Talk to some of them.
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