Since

this is my last week on federal extended UI benefits, Congress better get on the goddamned stick and pass the extension.

While the unemployment rate continues to rise, it appears Congress and the White House don't really have a clue as to how to get people back to work. "Reforming" health care and blathering about "green jobs" will do little to reverse the trend:

To make matters worse, unemployment among men and women is proving relentless. Of the 15.1 million people who are now officially counted as unemployed, over a third have been out of work for 27 weeks or longer, the highest percentage of long-term unemployment on record. By the end of the year, benefits will expire for more than one million unemployed workers. The House has passed a bare-bones extension of benefits; the Senate has a better bill, covering more long-term unemployed workers, and should pass it first thing this week.

The real work, however, lies ahead. Economic recovery will not automatically replace the jobs that have been lost so far in this recession. Nor will higher levels of learning and skill — necessary as they are — magically create jobs, especially in the numbers that are needed.

If successful, ambitious goals like health care reform and energy legislation may generate jobs, but officials have not persuasively linked them to job growth. Congress and the administration also have not done enough to directly create jobs. That could be done with more stimulus to spur job creation, or a large federal jobs program, or tax credits for hiring, or all three. Or surprise us. Just don’t pretend that the deteriorating jobs picture will self-correct, or act as if it is tolerable.

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