According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are roughly 238,000,000 American citizens in the Civilian, non-institutional population, of which 148,000,000 currently have jobs (62%). The Civilian, non-institutional population is every citizen between 18 and 67 not employed by the U.S. Armed Forces or in prison. As it stands, of the 148,000,000 people with jobs, approximately 30% are economically underemployed (that's 44.5 million people). These are people, like you, who have some sort of work below (either in terms of actual compensation or hours worked) their average earning potential as established by the period from 1990 to 2001. Now, it's important to note that balancing metric, because 1990 to 2001 represents a fundamentally over-saturated and cash loose employment period. It's not a good standard by which to judge current employment, but we've been chasing peak 1997 employment levels since Bush the Younger took office. This tends to skew both expectations and actual statistical reporting, because "normal" is actually what traditional economics views as an irrational job market.
Of course, you're wondering how all of this applies to LadyKate, and I have an answer for that, but it's not very happy. I do apologize in advance for how heartless and cruel this will seem.
We're in a depression. 30 years of over-employment, coupled with an unreasonable shift in product and service balances, created a situation wherein you are neither needed nor qualified for the positions you seek. This is not through any fault of your own, but economic realities are shifting requirements upward and compensation downward all around you. Quite simply, the companies (including the temp agency) where you seek employment have no need for you, because there exists a glut of previously over-qualified (both in terms of certifications and experience) applicants against which you have to compete. Indeed, the market is such that even people with degrees as prestigious as MBAs from Harvard and U Penn's Wharton College are being told to go back to school.
Consequently, there really isn't much you can do about the situation but to keep hitting the bricks and hitting them hard. It is a good thing that you have taken the work available to you, but the situation we're facing is not as hopeful as the television, pundits, and government wants you to believe.
Or, in case that was TL;DR ...
They aren't being polite because the economic situation means they don't have to be.
_________________ Corolinth wrote: Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.
Last edited by Khross on Tue Mar 08, 2011 1:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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