Business & Tech

Report: 16 Percent of Rockland County Men in Prime Working Years Not in Labor Force

The number of non-employed men in what should be their prime working years has tripled nationwide since 1968.

Written by Tom Edathikunnel

The number of men in their prime working years who are not employed has tripled in the United States since 1968, according to an interactive study by The New York Times.

Nationwide, 16 percent of men in the prime working ages of 25 to 54 are without work. That’s either because they’re officially unemployed or outside the labor force, meaning they’re disabled, retired, in school or taking care of a family.

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Rockland and Westchester counties are right at the national average: 16 percent of men in that age bracket are not working. The rate is slightly lower in Putnam County (15 percent). It’s higher in Orange (18 percent) and Dutchess (21 percent).

The rate isn’t so high everywhere. Employment rates among men in some places — the affluent areas of Manhattan, for example — approach 90 percent, close to the rates of the worker friendly 1950s and 1960s.

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The interactive data found in the Times, collected by the American Community Survey from 2009-2013 estimates, allows readers to examine non-employment rates in every census county across the country.

Click here to see the rates of every county in the country.

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