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Why Are So Many Men Leaving The Workforce? Government policy certainly plays a sizable role but changing American culture cannot be ignored
Mises Institute ^ | 12/22/2022 | Ryan McMaken

Posted on 12/22/2022 8:53:08 PM PST by SeekAndFind

Last week, CNN featured a story called "Men are dropping out of the workforce. Here's why" The article went on to tell us virtually nothing at all about why so many men are leaving the workforce. Although as many as seven million men have stayed out of the workforce for varying reasons, the CNN piece was really about how more women are joining the workforce, and how wonderful it is that more women are working in "male dominated" fields. The fact that more women are joining the workforce, however, tells us nothing about why men are leaving. Indeed, the CNN piece offered only one reason to answer why men are leaving the workforce: they're becoming stay-at-home dads.

That category, however, is fairly small and numbers only in the hundreds of thousands. That leaves us wondering why millions of men have left the workforce for reasons other than raising children. If we look deeper into the available information on the question, the reality appears to be a lot less rosy than CNN's suggested reason of "their wives are so doggone successful, these men decided to stay home and raise the kids."

Source: Census Bureau, Table SHP-1: Parents and Children in Stay-at-Home Parent Family Groups.

Instead, the reasons driving the lion's share of missing men to leave the workforce appear to be illness, drug addiction, a perceived lack of well-paying jobs, government welfare, and the decline of marriage. None of these are reasons to celebrate, and few of these reasons lend themselves to any quick fixes through changes in law or policy.

At Least Six Million Missing Men

As I noted earlier this month, there are at least six million men of "prime age" (age 25-54) who are out of the workforce for various reasons. Historically, this number has been getting larger at a rate faster than growth of total men in that age group. That is, fewer than 3 percent of prime-age men were "not in the workforce" in the late 1970s, but 5.6 percent of men in this group were out of the labor force in 2022. That translates into approximately 7.1 million men according to the Census Bureau's count of men "not in labor force."

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics.

We could contrast this with the proportion of women who are not in the labor force. Fewer prime-age women today are out of the labor force than was the case in the late 1970s. Women tend to remain out of the labor force in much larger numbers of men, so we find that in 2022, the total number of women out of the labor force is approximately 15 million. That number is smaller than what was common in the late 1970's, however. As more women have joined the labor force over the past 40 years, more men have left.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Again, it is important to emphasize we are talking about prime age men here, and we're excluding older and younger populations in which retirement and schooling remove large numbers of workers from the workforce.

Even including only prime age men, however, Alan B. Kreuger notes that the workforce trend in the US is headed downward faster than other wealthy countries:

Although the labor force participation rate of prime age men has trended down in the United States and other economically advanced countries for many decades, by international standards the labor force participation rate of prime age men in the United States is notably low.

Why Men Leave the Labor Force

Determining reasons for leaving the labor force is not easy, as the data depends heavily on surveys and on extrapolation. According to the census bureau, however, number less than 250,000 men in recent years are outside the labor force in order to care for children full time. This is only a tiny fraction of the total number of parents who leave the labor force to be stay-at-home parents. That leaves more than six million men who have left the labor force for some other reason.

Wages and Social Status

One thing is fairly clear: labor force participation is worse for men with less schooling. As Kreuger notes, labor force participation for prime age men has fallen for men at all education levels, "but by substantially more for those with a high school degree or less." Indeed, labor force participation has barely fallen for men with advanced degrees, but has gone into steep decline among high school dropouts and those with no college.

Source: Ariel J. Binder and John Bound, "The Declining Labor Market Prospects of Less-Educated Men," Journal of Economic Perspectives 33, no. 2 (Spring 2019): 170.

Closely connected to this is the relative wage growth among these groups. While inflation-adjusted wages have increased significantly for men with college-level schooling or more, the same is certainly not true for men with "some college" or less. In these latter groups, earnings have stagnated since 1965, having risen throughout the mid 1970s, falling below the 1965 wage by 1995, and then slowly returning to 1960s levels. While this does not represent a sizable fall in wages in real terms since 1965, it is a large drop relative to the wages of men with more schooling.

Source: Ariel J. Binder and John Bound, "The Declining Labor Market Prospects of Less-Educated Men," Journal of Economic Perspectives 33, no. 2 (Spring 2019): 165.

(Women, incidentally, have not seen nearly as large declines in wages based on levels of schooling.)

This growing earnings gap between men at various education levels has been blamed for driving the exit of so many men from the workforce. For example, in a report from the Boston Federal Reserve earlier this month, research Pinghui Wu concludes that relative decline in wages drives more men to leave the workforce than has the overall decline in real wages. Moreover, Wu ties the decline in relative wages to declines in "a worker’s social status." This effect is seen most strongly in non-Hispanic white men and younger men. Wu writes: "non-college-educated men are more likely to leave the labor force when the top earners in a state make disproportionately more than the other workers."

Falling social status has been tied to low job-satisfaction, disability, and higher mortality. All of this tends to lead to lower workforce participation. Moreover, men at lower education and lower wage levels tend to be more prone to workplace injury, given the nature of the work. Indeed, as Ariel Binder and John Bound have shown, men who have exited the labor force say they are frequently in pain, and take pain medication regularly. Men in this group who are over 45 years of age also tend to be more frequently eligible for government disability benefits. Binder and Bound suggest that the expansion of disability benefits in recent decades "could explain up to 25 percent of the rise in nonparticipation among 45–54 year-old high school graduates (without college)."

The Decline of Marriage

Wu, Binder, and Bound all also point to another important factor in falling male workforce participation: changes in marriage patterns.

Wu notes that men with lower social status fare more poorly in the marriage market, and that "marriage market sorting [a] potential channels through which relative earnings affect men’s labor force exit decisions." This would also help explain why declining social status also appears to especially affect younger men who are more likely to be active in pursuing a spouse.

Binder and Bound meanwhile note declining marriage rates are closely tied to workforce participation overall. This works in both directions: Declining incomes lead to declines in marriage. But unmarried men also have less incentive to actively seek employment. Marriage also may hamper a man's ability to draw income from existing relatives. Binder and Bound write:

As others have documented, family structure in the United States has changed dramatically since the 1960s, featuring a tremendous decline in the share of less educated men forming and maintaining stable marriages. We additionally show an increase in the share of less-educated men living with their parents or other relatives. Providing for a new family plausibly provides a man with incentives to engage in labor market activity: conversely, a reduction in the prospects of forming and maintaining a stable family removes an important labor supply incentive. At the same time, the possibility of drawing income support from existing relatives creates a feasible labor-force exit.

It's not just men with lower levels of schooling who marry less often, however. Marriage has indeed declined more for lower-income men than higher-income men. Declining marriage rates at the middle-class level and below, however, likely drive falling labor participation independent of wages. That is, "changing family structure shifts male labor supply incentives independently of labor market conditions" as unmarried men are simply less motivated to work."

What Is to Blame?

The importance of relative wages points to the importance of economic factors in the decline of working men.

Enormous growth in government intervention in the twentieth century has led to a reversal of nineteenth century trends and led instead to capital consumption. It is notable that since the 1970s, savings and investment have declined, and Mihai Macovai notes " the real stock of capital per worker has grown in a clear and sustained manner only until the end-1970s and fell afterwards until the trough of the Great Recession." This has led to declining worker productivity and lower wages for many workers.

In more recent years, covid lockdowns impacted lower-income workers the most, and lockdowns are likely to raise overall mortality among these workers, as well, even years after the lockdowns ended. Unemployment and intermittent employment is tied to higher mortality rates and disability in both the medium and long terms.

Finally, a powerful factor is the central bank's monetary policy which has been linked to a rising gap between higher-income workers and lower-income ones. Easy-money policy has been especially damaging to wealth-building for lower-income groups, as Karen Petrou notes in her book Engine of Inequality:

Ultra-low [interest] rates fundamentally eviscerated the ability of all but the wealthy to gain an economic toehold; instead they lead investors to drive up equity and other asset prices to achieve their return … but average Americans hold little, if any, stock or investment instruments. Instead, they save what they can in bank accounts. The rates on these have been so low for so long that these thrifty, prudent households have in fact set themselves back with each dollar they save. Pension funds are just as hard-hit meaning not only that average Americans can't save for the future, but also that the instruments on which they count for additional security are unlikely to meet their needs.

But not all can be blamed on economic policy. The importance of marriage as a factor in workforce participation illustrates that some aspects of declining workforce participation lie beyond mere economics. Marriage rates for the middle class have continued to fall even in periods when median wages have increased—such as the 1990s. These trends are tied to changes in ideology, religious observance, and a host of social factors. Other factors such as rising drug addiction and obesity affect workforce participation as they are tied to disability and poor health, often at elevated rates among lower-income workers.

In other words, government policy certainly plays a sizable role in declining male workforce participation, but changing American culture cannot be ignored.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Society
KEYWORDS: jobs; male; tldr; workforce
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1 posted on 12/22/2022 8:53:08 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

To paraphrase Reagan: “I didn’t leave the workforce - the workforce left me.”


2 posted on 12/22/2022 8:55:36 PM PST by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
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To: SeekAndFind

Perfect solution for millions of idle young males, let’s start a war with Russia!


3 posted on 12/22/2022 8:55:45 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: dfwgator

World War IV!!!

Woohoo!!!

✝️🙏🛐


4 posted on 12/22/2022 9:02:35 PM PST by SaveFerris (Luke 17:28 ... as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold ......)
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To: SeekAndFind

Gee they have done everything to drive men out of the workforce. The only demographic that can be legally discriminated against, especially if white. And if the man is older they fire him because health and higher salary.

FOAD Gynosociety.


5 posted on 12/22/2022 9:05:44 PM PST by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: Secret Agent Man

Jordan Peterson has covered this extensively. It is all by design. The Marxist noose is tightening.


6 posted on 12/22/2022 9:07:36 PM PST by Right Brother
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To: Right Brother

Yep. Jordan’s right.

Note that while they push men “out”, they also blame men for not being “in”. They’re doing it and at the same time making it appear like its the mens’ fault.


7 posted on 12/22/2022 9:09:42 PM PST by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: Secret Agent Man

📂


8 posted on 12/22/2022 9:11:55 PM PST by Varsity Flight ( "War by the prophesies set before you." I Timothy 1:18. Nazarite prayer warriors. 10.5.6.5)
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To: SeekAndFind; All
While inflation-adjusted wages have increased "significantly" for men with college-level schooling or more

Hilariously false. Did they not look at their own data in the chart?

It shows college grads made $27.50/hr in 1970 and $29.00/hr in 2015.

An increase of $1.50/hr over a 45 year interval. That works out to 3 cents/hour/yr. THAT IS NOT SIGNIFICANT.


9 posted on 12/22/2022 9:14:25 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: Secret Agent Man
Your Gynosociety was put in place by liberal beta males and soy boys. BECU was a great place to work until the gay CEO hired in a few woke minorities that sold out the local work force, white women and Asians included and hired out of state in Georgia, minorities preferred. Then he handed over the company to another woke minority who finished the job..

All the presidents have been men and since Clinton all except Trump pushed for foreign workers to take over American jobs.

10 posted on 12/22/2022 9:38:54 PM PST by dragonblustar (If you watch porn then you are a pedophile and a supporter of rape. Repent and be saved! )
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To: SeekAndFind
I have two daughters in their late twenties. I was not blessed with a son, so I can’t really speak from experience about how to avoid raising a lazy ass son. I can speak to the other side of the equation, meaning there’s a great woman out there for men that do the right things. Not to boast, but my daughters are great women. They got that way by being instilled with high expectations for themselves and their men.

My daughters have high expectations in men. My eldest daughter is married to a airborne ranger, who is highly educated, BS and MS degrees, he has studied abroad. He is in excellent physical condition and takes care of his body. He’s speaks multiple languages, has a personality, although a tab bit stoic, is God fearing, a conservative, a great father to my grandson, a musician, and calls me sir.

My youngest is dating a lawyer, who’s a partner in a firm that just acquired two other firms, he practices tax and corporate law, and his main client is an international oil exploration and production company. He’s God fearing, a libertarian, major 2a advocate that frequently goes to the range. He hunts and has decent tastes in music. He’s in decent physical shape, thin and trim, but not very muscular. He doesn’t call me sir, so I don’t have to tell him not to like I do with my son in law.

These two young men will go far in life. They are the antithesis to these lazy asses that play video games and watch porn all day. They have high expectations and are matched with women that have high expectations. They have standards. I can only assume these lazy ass unemployment boys have no standards or expectations. Apparently, no one told them that they will get what the aim for. Probably, something along the lines of several men’s baby momma, semi-toothless slut that speaks incoherently about what she saw on daytime TV. Her dream home is a double wide close to her meth dealer. That really isn’t too much hyperbole.

11 posted on 12/22/2022 9:43:52 PM PST by ConservativeInPA (Stupidly is a moral problem, not an intellectual problem. )
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To: Taxman

Ping


12 posted on 12/22/2022 9:46:48 PM PST by Taxman (SAVE AMERICA! VOTE REPUBLICAN IN 2023 AND 2024!)
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: rellic

“I would build your aircraft as I have done before.”
should be
I would NOT build your aircraft as I have done before.


14 posted on 12/22/2022 9:48:36 PM PST by rellic
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To: rellic

We get it. Begs the question of exactly who is voluntarily joining the military to support this fascist government?


15 posted on 12/22/2022 9:51:05 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: SeekAndFind

Total crap conclusions. Another “study” to shame men and call for more of the same that caused this. “Inequality.”


16 posted on 12/22/2022 10:00:45 PM PST by Organic Panic (Democrats. Memories as short as Joe Biden's eyes)
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To: central_va

I don’t know.
It certainly isn’t people that like to fight.
Sounds kind of juvenile, but I’ll fight with anyone.
These “Woke” soldiers are more worried about acceptance.
I was taught accomplish the mission.
I was also taught to evaluate and when
to adjust orders, Mi Lai comes to mind.


17 posted on 12/22/2022 10:03:46 PM PST by rellic
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To: SeekAndFind

The power of massive government debt and spending on 10000 leftist social-engineering schemes, allowed by our printed, fiat Federal Reserve monetary system.


18 posted on 12/22/2022 10:17:24 PM PST by PGR88
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To: SeekAndFind

I retired at 55. In reality, I went Gault. I refuse to support the deep state. It can support me.


19 posted on 12/22/2022 10:34:18 PM PST by Fai Mao (Stop feeding the beast, and steal its food!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Im leaving the workforce and starting my own gig almost entirely because of managerial BS and incompetence that is unbearable.


20 posted on 12/22/2022 10:48:07 PM PST by griffin (When you have to shoot, SHOOT; don't talk. -Tuco)
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