On November 1, 2012 Annie Lowrey and Catherine Rampell write in The New York Times:
In the economy-focused presidential campaign, the two candidates and their teams have scarcely mentioned what economists describe as not just one of the labor market’s most pressing problems, but the entire country’s: long-term unemployment. Nearly five million Americans out of work for more than six months are left to wonder what kind of help might be coming…
The ONLY way the economy, which is reflected in the reality that jobs ONLY slowly continue to return and those jobs are paying less and less, is for stimulating and incentivizing economic growth simultaneously with broadening private, individual ownership in FUTURE income-producing capital assets generated by our business corporations––productive land, resources, structures, machinery, human-intelligent machines, superautomation, robotics, digital computerized operations, etc. JOB CREATION always follows OWNERSHIP CREATION, and the solution is to balance production and consumption with broadened ownership as tectonic shifts in the technologies of production will continue to destroy and degrade (less income) jobs.
The lingering unemployment will persist until we can stimulate and incentivize new capital formation financed so that EVERY American can have access to CAPITAL HOMESTEAD loans (without pledging “past” savings or equity) to invest in FUTURE growth assets that will generate income to pay back the loans. While this will result in a short-term demand for labor, long-term the capital plant once built will less and less labor to sustain. That is why is it is CRITICAL that EVERY American have the equal opportunity to build a viable income-producing capital estate and become stronger self-sufficient individuals and less dependent on taxpayer-supported government welfare.