They should have also broken it down by the income level.
> They should do this kind of graph for health care coverage.
Some topics are not appropriate for public discourse as far as large media corporations are concerned. We are not supposed to discuss the number of bankruptcies / year due to health care costs, or how health insurance is linked to employment and since there is a high un-employment, there is probably a large number of un-insured individuals as well. And how on the first accident any one of those uninsured will probably blow through their life savings, credit card accounts and eventually declare bankruptcy.
Yes, but I would propose breaking it down by their level of median annual income over the last 5-10 years. This would give a number, for any given individual, would tend to change gradually over a lifetime and would not be significantly affected by a year or two of unemployment.
This would show how much of the unemployment was affecting only those who were already losing in the employment game.
The graph shows that the recession IS affecting everyone in all the groups equally.
They are all a few percentage higher than last September, but the ratio is the same as last September.
Instead of doing this by age, gender, race and education they should have shown this by TYPE of job.
Then it would be very uneven.
They should do this kind of graph for health care coverage.