Here's my personal "take" on unemployment....
There's always at least 6% or so that are "terminally" unemployed. If you counted the welfare roles or the folks that never have looked for a job -- or those that have "given up" -- it would be a much higher (%). Frankly -- "they" don't count since they're not "consumers" except for the very basic goods. It's the psychology and fear that affects the 80% that counts... because they're the ones that "pull back" spending... and that's where the damage is done. IF the talking heads said -- hey! Good news! Most everyone that wants a job has one!
What I never understand is the FOCUS on the unemployed. If you had 20% unemployed - what that says to me is that 80% are still working... and being productive. But all anyone (the tv talking heads) can talk about is the unemployed. My wife spent her entire career as a senior HR person... and the only "unemployed" people in her businesses where the bottom of the productive barrel. They might have gotten "laid off" -- but that's just noise for being fired in a mass way. House cleaning.
Ditto the housing crisis... MOST people are paying their mortgage on time -- MOST people are NOT underwater on their houses... sadly those that are have ruined it for the rest of us. This debacle is deeply rooted in GOVERNMENTAL interference in the normal housing market. They ALLOWED and set up the lenders to give away cheap TEMPORARY money... which escalated, artificially the price of houses.
BUT now we're in a political discussion which serves no purpose as I think almost everyone in America understands what happened.
All of my professional life -- only the people with a real down payment - and stellar credit rating got the lowest interest rate. Poor credit -- you paid a risk premium or had to come up with a co-signer - or higher down payment. What the REGULATORS did is to "allow" (by not putting a stop to this practice) the poorest credit rate folks with ZERO down payment get the best interest rate. And we know how that turned out don't we?