Money | unemployment The Jobless Stat You Should Worry About People in their prime working years aren't finding jobs By Kevin Spak Posted May 30, 2012 9:43 AM CDT Copied In this Tuesday, April 24, 2012 photo, Taylor Schnuerle, 23, of Portland, center, stands in line with other job seekers during a job fair, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) The unemployment rate may be improving, but that doesn't mean the job market is, and there's one group in particular that's having an alarmingly hard time finding work: People in their prime working years. Only 75.7% of people aged 25 to 54 have jobs, the Washington Post reports, a portion smaller than any seen in the 23 years before the recession. Men have been hit especially hard; their percentage hasn't been this low since 1948. That's alarming because between the ages of 25 and 54 is the time when workers are expected to build careers and retirement funds. Economists say the figure provides a better view of the job market than the unemployment rate, which only counts people actively looking for work. "The unemployment rate is screwy right now because the labor market is so weak that people have stopped trying," one economist explains. Read These Next People have thoughts on Charlie Kirk and are getting fired for them. Charlie Kirk's widow has a message for the world. The new dividing line: Posts about Charlie Kirk These nuns really, really didn't like their old folks home. Report an error