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The lucky Americans who have jobs are working more hours for less money, which is keeping American productivity up but worker morale low, and over the last few months we've gotten a clearer picture of what that means for workers. This summer, workers at Research in Motion, the Canadian creator of the BlackBerry, detailed the unfavorable working conditions. Then, last month, Amazon employees spoke up about the unbelievable working conditions at the company's warehouses, and earlier this week, we learned about Target's regime in The Huffington Post. These employees are putting faces to the scary numbers of the Great Recession.

Here's the trend: More productivity; high unemployment. It's not just that Americans have magically gotten better at tasks, hours worked are up. Since 1977, the share of people working 50 hours per week has steadily risen for most demographics, as the Center for American Progress notes. What does that look like for in real life: Companies are requiring employees to work harder, longer hours. And it's not pretty, as Amazon employees explained to The Morning Call.

One former temporary warehouse employee said he worked seven months before he was terminated for not working fast enough. In his 50s, he worked 10 hours a day, four days a week as a picker, plucking items from bins and delivering them to packers who put them in boxes for shipment. He would walk 13 to 15 miles daily, he estimated, and was among the oldest pickers.

Meanwhile, corporate profits are up 20 percent, continue Bauerlein and Jeffery, and companies aren't hiring to lighten the load. The economy added 103,000 jobs last month, and zero the month before.