[quote name='fatherofcaitlyn']
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080307/ap_on_bi_go_ec_fi/economy
Then, why bother with an unemployment rate?[/QUOTE]
The unemployment rate is an imperfect measure primarily because it omits people who aren't actively looking for work; currently, there is a great amount of pessimism over the direction of the economy, and people don't feel like they stand a chance at getting hired anywhere right now. So, simply put, they aren't looking for work, and the unemployment rate tumbles.
There's a decent theoretical reason why the unemployment rate is calculated this way, as you only really want to count as "unemployed" those adults who *want* to work in the first place.
Paul Krugman showed another measure of employment/economic quality recently, which is the ratio of employed adults to overall adults - it's also imperfect, but since you would expect that ratio to stay much more stable, a huge drop in that (which we have experienced since 2001) indicated a poor economy.
Remember, after all, the recovery after the 2001 recession was called a "jobless recovery" (there's another term for it I can't think of at the moment) because, while the economy bounced back, few people recovered the jobs they lost.
On another note, I think every economist and financial speculator worth a shit is really thinking this right now, but too scared to say it: we're headed for a depression.