Documentary filmmaker and West Virginia native Morgan Spurlock, an Oscar nominee whose most famous works skewered America's food industry and who notably ate only at McDonald’s for a month to illustrate the dangers of a fast-food diet, has died. He was 53.
Raising W.Va. Labor Force Participation To National Average Would Means Thousands More Workers
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West Virginia’s unemployment numbers are at record low levels — currently it stands at 3.7 percent. But a nagging problem remains the low labor force participation numbers — that is the number of people who are eligible to work, but aren’t working or not even trying to find a job. Our labor force participation is among the lowest in the country.
Eric Douglas spoke with WVU economist Heather Stephens about the state’s labor force, and what just raising our labor force to the national average would mean for the state.
This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.
Douglas: Below about 4 percent unemployment is generally considered full employment, right?
Stephens: People don’t know the exact number, but you’re right, once you get into this kind of range, it’s statistically close to full employment. That means that most people who have decided they want to work are able to find a job. It doesn’t say anything about the quality of the jobs. So there could be still people in the state that are underemployed, meaning that they’re working, but they’re not working full time or are not making enough money to offset the rising inflation that’s happening.
Douglas: We’re at 55 percent labor force participation and the country’s at 62 percent. So there’s theoretically 7 percent of the state population that could be working.
Stephens: The whole idea of the civilian population that is used to calculate the labor force participation rate is that technically even more of that population could be eligible to work, but there’s always going to be reasons people aren’t in the labor force. This has been an ongoing challenge for West Virginia. We’ve had historically these lower levels of labor force participation that can’t really be explained by the demographics of our population. It’s a big challenge to deal with. I agree, perhaps that needs to be the focus, especially if there are these new employment opportunities. It’s also possible that relatively high paying new jobs would be the stimulus that would bring people who haven’t been in the labor force back in. In economics, we talk about this reservation wage or reservation opportunity, which it’s different for every person, but below which people really don’t want to work. It’s not worth my time, or it could be the cost of childcare, the cost of commuting, there’s all kinds of reasons, right? So the right opportunities might be enough to bring people back into the labor force.
Douglas: Is there a way to quantify that number of people just to get labor force participation in the state up to the national average.
Stephens: Right now, the labor force of the state is at about 789,900. So if we were to go to 61.9 percent of our population, we would go up about 888,000. That would be an increase of almost 100,000 people.
Douglas: If we were at national levels of labor force participation, there’d be 100,000 more people in the labor force.
Stephens: If we use that to apply our unemployment rate, 94,000 more people would actually be working, if we assume that once those people entered the labor force, that only 3 to 4 percent would be unemployed. Even if unemployment was a lot higher, you’d still be talking about a significant number of people working or eligible to work in the state.
Douglas: That’s pretty incredible numbers actually, and we’re not discussing pie in the sky dream labor force participation, you’re just talking the national average.
Stephens: That’s a national average. Yeah, there are places that are much higher. Honestly, even just like a couple percent increase, if you only had like 1 or 2 percent, you’d still get thousands of new people working in West Virginia.
West Virginia’s labor force has lagged behind the national average for at least 46 years, according to statistics from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
On this West Virginia Morning, the United States Postal Service (USPS) announced last week it would postpone delivery network changes that would downsize the Charleston Processing and Distribution Center. But this news hasn’t remedied months-long tensions between local workers and USPS officials. As Jack Walker reports, union representatives are now filing grievance claims for some workers.
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