http://blogs.metrotimes.com/index.php/2010/10/sit-down-when-you-read-this-take-2/

Sit down when you read this: Economy in red and blues
October 28, 2010
By W. Kim Heron

Last April we posted a link to what News Editor Curt Guyette described as:

… a devastating interactive map that chronicles the progression of
national job losses over the past two years, showing county by county
where they have been cut and where they are growing. It is like
watching a time-lapse version of an accident in the process of
unfolding. …

With shades of blue showing areas of growth and red indicating
decline, the map is filled with blue. Overall, compared to the same
time a year earlier, the country had gained more than 2.6 million
jobs. The only significant splotch of red emanates from the lower
joint of Michigan’s thumb, with Wayne County losing 6,000 jobs and
Oakland more than 4,000.

Click on an arrow and the map begins to morph, almost imperceptibly at
first, then picking up speed like a train speeding downhill. The dab
of red that is southeast Michigan begins to expand, like blood from a
wound seeping into a gauze pad. By July of 2008, losses begin to
outstrip gains, and the bleeding starts to accelerate. By February
2009 much of the Midwest is buried in red. So are the East Coast, from
North Carolina to New Hampshire, along with Florida and Alabama and
Georgia and much of California. Overall, the nation lost more than 4
million jobs during the preceding 12 months. During the same period,
Oakland and Wayne Counties together lost more than 100,000 jobs.

Sometimes its good to be on the leading edge. But no one ever wants to
be at the forefront of the bleeding edge, which, as this map shows
with chilling effect, is exactly where we’ve been.

So have we made progress since last April? The map has now been
updated, and we’re no longer drowning in red — which means that we’ve
added jobs in the last 12 months, not that we’ve made up all the
losses of of the down years. In other words, there’s not  enough blue
to float enough of our boats yet either. Of course, to listen to the
umbrage heaped on the Obama administration you’d think that either a)
things really weren’t so bad two years ago or b) things would have
bettered on their own (and perhaps moreso) without such stimulus as
was administered.

To revisit our original headline, we’d still recommend sitting down
when you watch this. And don’t worry about jumping for joy when it’s
over.

And for another look at the state we’re in, check MSNBC’s Adversity
Index, a collaborative project with Moody’s Analytics that gathers
data on jobs, industrial production, housing starts and home prices
for metro areas and the 50 states.

Update: And since originally posting this a couple hours ago, we’ve
had out coattails pulled — by local economist Karl Gregory — to yet
another graphic depiction of the situation. This one, displaying the
unemployment rate, rather than job gains and losses, is particularly
sobering.

Tags: economy, employment, job gains, job losses, metro detroit,
Slate, unemployment

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