Taskiss wrote:
Well, women were already represented pretty much as they are now in the workforce by that time... not sure what would be more obvious than that...
I'd guess that jobs started being farmed out overseas in greater numbers and a trade imbalance.
No, it's just an issue of supply and demand.
1. More women entering the workforce in non-professional positions relative to the 1960s.
2. Open enrollment graduates start showing up around 1972.
So, the workforce expands at both the entry level and the professional level while market demands continue to push the value of labor down. By the middle 1980s, the two-income family is well beyond the norm; it is, in fact, almost mandatory for 90% of wage earning households. A number that continued to rise (as a general rule) through the 1990s and first decade of this millennium.
But, basically, the answer is that the supply of labor pushed down the value of labor, especially as we stopped making tangible things. The emergence of a "Service Economy" is a byproduct of having too many for too few material employment positions.
In any case, this gets back to very long posts I've made about over-employment in the United States; it also gets back to lying with statistics. The absolute number of jobs and the relative participation rates have been touted as signs of progress (by progressives) and growth while wages and household incomes remained flat or declined over the same period of time. But, the distribution of income doesn't change as much as anyone really thinks ...
The rich people still control the majority of wealth, but not the majority of income until we start changing what constitutes real income in both law and accounting during the same time period. Stock Holdings were only income if they paid dividends (most did during the early half the 20th Century); most don't know. Now we consider income to be the difference in absolute dollar value primarily accounted for by inflation with most stocks. There are extreme outliers like Cisco or Big Blue or Microsoft, but for the most part: the actual market value of a company's shares in circulation tends to stay flat when adjusted for inflation: this is why you invest in index funds.
All of that said, the problems we're facing now and the reason's we're in a depression have more to do with long term corrections and the untenability of our reporting and policy practices: which is to say, telling the truth might very well cause a confidence crisis.
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