Kathi OD
<marquee><font color=blue>The first person to repl
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2007
- Messages
- 12,879
There is an excellent article from the Wall Street Journal about jobs that may never come back even in a recovering economy. Construction was one category mentioned, as well as finance jobs,especially those related to the housing industry, secretaries (because of all the technology, companies don't need as many administrative workers) and manufacturing.
My thought is that if you work in a declining industry, or if you are unwilling or unable to physically move if you live in a depressed region, then you strongly need to consider re-training yourself for another career.
If I got laid off (and it could happen) I would be taking college classes in a some type of medical technology during the year that I was collecting unemployment. Those jobs don't go away, and they are portable- not affected by where you live.
I think if you work in a declining industry, and you don't consider re-training, 6 more months of unemployment is not going to make much difference- in 6 months you probably are still going to have trouble getting a job.
I don't mean to sound harsh at all- just practical. I think it's terrible that we are sending all of our jobs to foreign countries. I don't like that as a country, we don't make anything any more. But it doesn't matter what any of us think- it's happening- we are a service economy- and the only way to survive is to make sure we are employable, or to dramatically cut back on our lifestyles so that we can afford to live on much less.
If you're unemployed and struggling to pay your bills, how do you pay for re-training? DH went to our county to inquire about re-training and was told that he didn't qualify because he had a college degree. I'd be willing to bet that, in this particular recession, there are a lot of unemployed who are in the same situation.
You never know when UE is going to hit your family. You really need to be prepared. Those experts who talk about having a 6 month emergency fund are dead wrong. Today, you need at least 12 months, and probably more.
Cutting back is exactly what we should all be doing. Once you've gone through that long stretch of doing without, it's not that hard to do. While DH is making much less than before he got laid off, he's making a lot more than he was on UE. All that extra money, which we used to piddle away, is now going into savings or toward paying down our bills. While we had quite a bit of money in our savings when he got laid off, we also had some unnecessary debt. Lesson learned...it will never happen again.