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When it comes to government economic data, it is easy to get terribly confused.
But in recent years, it has also become easy to be more and more suspicious
of the numbers themselves.
On the confusion front, almost every month now we go through the employment
numbers dichotomy of "household survey" versus "payroll survey." The difference
between the two series has widened over the years, and the monthly differences
are often very substantial. Although the two surveys are constructed using
different methodology, they do purport to measure employment changes in the
same labor force in the same country!
As far as suspicion is concerned, I know absolutely no one who really believes
their own cost of living is up the mere 3% over the last year that the Consumer
Price Index is suggesting.. And the CPI represents just one of several areas
over which people manifest increasing suspicion about the accuracy and the
intellectural honesty, if not the outright honesty, of government data.
Enter friend and client, Walter J "John" Williams.
John has a long, distinguished record of following and critiquing the changes
occurring over the years in the government's reporting of the economic numbers
that can and do influence our lives in a major way. As one example, look at
how they whip around the financial markets at given moments in time. And every
four years, this being one of those years, these data can have a major bearing
on who our President will be.
John has written some intriguing material for me to post on the Gillespie
Research website. I envision presenting his work in at least a three-installment
series, with this first installment dealing specifically with employment data.
However, the introduction section serves this function for the entire series.
Readers will find it highly enlightening in its own right.
John Williams joins a growing list of guest contributors who have provided
some terrific material in the short time the website has been in existence.
When you have a moment, go to the website's "Guest Contributions" section on
the home page (lower right-hand column). Peruse some of the other great work
that is available there.
Now, however, access, read and enjoy: "A
Primer on Government Economic Reporting -- Things You've Probably Suspected
But Perhaps Were Afraid to Ask!".
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