Last year, the new pneumonia (Chinese communist virus) struck the world, bringing down the economy, disrupting people’s lives, and causing countless people to lose their jobs. In the United States, for example, more than 100 million people are unemployed, but the latest survey found that 94% of the unemployed actually do not want to work, analysis said or to a large extent related to U.S. President Joe Biden.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data show that more than 100 million Americans are without jobs, but more noteworthy is that only 6.85 million people want to return to work, another 94 million do not want to work, a record number.
During the epidemic, jewelry manufacturing company Silver Chest Creations laid off three employees, and as business resumed, the company tried to rehire them, but they refused. In another example, Sierra Pacific Industries, which makes windows, doors and wood products, offered hiring bonuses of up to $1,500 at its California, Washington and Wisconsin facilities because of the urgent need for staff.
In fact, according to a previous report by the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), 42 percent of small businesses surveyed had job openings in March, also a record figure, compared to the average of 22 percent since 1974. The situation is even worse is 91% of respondents said that in the past three months, they hardly encountered qualified job seekers, for since the 1993 NFIB survey added the question since the 3rd highest.
The reason, according to some analysis, is that the epidemic has made more people want to stay home, especially in most customer-facing jobs. At the same time, the epidemic has closed schools, and some parents have refused to work in order to take care of their children. More real may be because of the Biden administration’s stimulus plan, Americans refuse to work pending weekly unemployment benefits.
Market participants are concerned that many people will find it difficult to return to full-time work, and with the severe labor shortage in the United States, it could lead to a rise in U.S. wages; or even turn into another crisis, so that millennials will stay away from work. They were not motivated to devote themselves to their work.
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