Sounds easy to "just" get a new job ... I wish real life was like that.
Depending on your skill set and location, it is easy to find a new job. People who can write software should not have a hard time finding work in the US unless they are avoiding cities with a population over 100k, or are terrible at selling themselves. The unemployment rate for programmers in this country is roughly half that of the national average. If you're having problems find steady work, you're doing something wrong, and it has nothing to do with the recovering US economy.
I don't do programming, I do instrumentation installation, repair, and calibration.
The only software I write, are updates for electronic sensors, and I rarely do that.
The US economy is FAILING - my sector has shrunk considerably since 2006, and is continuing to do down.
My employment is directly tied to construction / repair in manufacturing and energy .
If you want to know how "recovering" things are, 8 power houses are shutting down Dec/31, a major paper mill is gone to China, 1 oil refinery closed down, and several assembly plants went under. All with in 250 miles of were I am staying right now, and all this year.
The unemployment rate for an instrument tech is well over 28%, and climbing.
Edit: every time I read THIS STUFF, I get depressed. Each plant closing is less maintenance work available to me.