|
On October 6th the Economic Policy Institute reported Slowing
economy generates fewer jobs
The nation's rate of job growth downshifted sharply last month, as employers
added only 51,000 jobs, according to today's report
from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). This marks the lowest month
for net job gains since the Gulf Coast hurricanes disrupted the labor market
last fall. Even with a large upward revision to August's job gains (188,000
-- 60,000 more jobs than first reported), the average monthly gain this year
has been 137,000, below last year's monthly rate of 165,000.
The unemployment rate ticked down to 4.6%, though the change was statistically
insignificant. Employment in the household survey, which often moves quite
differently than the payroll data noted above, jumped by 271,000. Here again,
however, the Bureau reported that gains from this survey need to surpass
414,000 to indicate, with statistical certainty, that job growth was positive
(the smaller sample and greater volatility from this survey leads to this
large "confidence interval").
Two other indicators of slowing demand in the job market come from the hours'
data. Average weekly hours were flat last month and have moved little this
year. Combining the stagnation in weekly hours with the slowing rate of job
growth, the BLS's index of total hours worked by private sector, non-managerial
workers fell in both August and September.
Is there a Discrepancy?
According to Bloomberg U.S.
Finds 810,000 More Jobs, Helping Explain Data Discrepancy.
Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Labor Department found employers hired almost
a million more workers in the year to March than previously estimated, bringing
job gains more in line with what households had been saying all along.
About 810,000 more jobs will be added to the payroll count when the figures
are officially revised next February, the department estimated today. The
proposed revision, the biggest since Labor started adjusting the numbers
in 1991, would mean the economy created 2.6 million jobs from April 2005
through March instead of the 1.8 million now on the books.
The revision will go a long way toward solving the mystery of why households,
in a separate Labor survey, were saying job gains during that period were
much larger. Confirmation that employment was stronger may help explain why
consumers haven't buckled when faced with record fuel prices and a decline
in the housing market.
"It explains the strength in incomes that we've seen and it explains why
the unemployment rate has come down to a five- year low," said Conrad DeQuadros,
a senior economist at Bear Stearns Cos. in New York. "There is some support
to this economic expansion."
Once a year, the Labor Department revises its payroll figures after combing
through tax records from the unemployment insurance program that covers practically
all businesses. Those records are only available after a lag, explaining
why it takes over a year to make the tabulations.
Lack of Response
The Labor Department said it is looking into why the expected revision this
time around is three times larger than the average over the last decade.
Part of the investigation involves determining whether the firms that are
doing much of the hiring aren't responding to their survey, said Kirk Mueller,
chief of national benchmarking and special projects at the Bureau of Labor
Statistics in Washington.
Another possibility is that the department's method of determining the formation
and demise of businesses, called the birth/death model, may be faulty, he
said.
The divergence between the two employment surveys continued last month.
The household survey showed a 271,000 gain in employment for September while
payrolls were up a smaller-than- expected 51,000. Because the revisions suggest
the poll of households may be capturing employment gains better than the
payroll survey, the job market may be stronger than it looks, economists
said.
Overcoming my initial speechlessness at the idea that we added 810,000 more
jobs in the year to March 2005 to June 2005, I have several questions, five
actually.
Five Questions
- Assuming we did gain 810,000 jobs March to March, how does that affect
the much ballyhooed productivity statistics? When will we see revisions?
- Did it really take 810,000 more people working to produce a GDP that is
barely above the stall rate?
- If job expansion is so robust why are real wages falling?
- Assuming we did gain those jobs exactly what was the distribution of those
jobs over time?
- What can we expect looking forward?
As interesting as I think question one is, the key to what is going to happen
economically is more likely behind door number five.
Let's look at the birth/death numbers for 2006.
CES Net Birth/Death Model

In Strike
Four I questioned the Birth/Death Model, critical that it was adding
jobs that simply did not exist. Now it seems that the labor department thinks
810,000 more jobs need to be added to totals that I thought were already
exaggerated on the high end.
Pondering the latest Birth/Death revisions once again I see construction jobs
are being added by the model. 157,000 construction jobs were added between
February-September in the face of the massive housing slowdown. Is that plausible?
Was construction that much understated in 2004 perhaps that the model needed
to add all of those jobs in 2005? Unless the revised numbers reflect one last
final push by builders to complete projects as all hell was breaking loose
in sales, those numbers do not seem to make a lot of sense.
A Trend Change
Note that for the first time since January, jobs were being lost in Leisure & Hospitality.
Jobs at restaurants such as Pizza Hut and Outback Steakhouse are included in
that total. Is there any doubt this sector has been overbuilt? Still, the model
suggests that 342,000 additional jobs (over the physical payroll data) were
created between January and September 2006. Is that a plausible number? Actually
a better question is "Is that a sustainable number?"
Please consider the following snip about the Birth/Death Model straight from
the BLS: "The most significant potential drawback to this or any model-based
approach is that time series modeling assumes a predictable continuation of
historical patterns and relationships and therefore is likely to have some
difficulty producing reliable estimates at economic turning points or during
periods when there are sudden changes in trend."
Something is seriously wrong if 810,000 jobs have to be added on behalf of
past activity. In addition, the economy has finally turned. The leading indicators
think so, the yield curve thinks so, and in fact about the only things that
do not think so are the stock market and the economic cheerleaders. Looking
ahead, plan for more discrepancies in the numbers.
Some might suggest that commercial construction is still booming. Perhaps
for now it is. But for how long? Commercial real estate tends to lag home construction
by a year or so. As subdivisions build out, retailers and restaurants and gas
stations start moving in. Strip malls multiply. Plans are made by Walmart and
Home Depot and Lowes and Pizza hut to add stores. Those plans are set and that
construction goes on, even if (as is happening now) housing is collapsing in
its wake.
Housing where I live has pretty much slowed to a crawl but we still have a
huge new Walmart going up nearby. That store will likely employ 500 people
or more. Yet in the face of a continued slowdown, will growth of such stores
continue at anywhere near the same pace? What do corporate executives think?
CEO Outlook
Investors.Com is reporting CEOs
Gloomy On U.S. Outlook
Nearly half (45.6%) of CEOs polled by the Business Council and Conference
Board expect the economy to worsen over the next 6 months vs. 13.2% who think
it'll improve. In Jan.-Feb., 28.4% expected better times vs. 16% who were
downbeat. Most expect the economy to grow 2% to 3% in '07
Are gloomy CEOs likely to be adding many jobs? More and more it seems the
much ballyhooed "soft landing scenario" that commercial expansion will take
over where the consumer left off is a bunch of nonsense.
Let's now see if we can tackle questions four and five above:
4) Assuming we really did gain those jobs exactly what was the distribution
of those jobs over time?
5) What can we expect looking forward?
Knowing that housing peaked in Summer of 2005, I suggest most of those jobs
were filled by November of 2005. Given the lag in commercial construction,
the remainder of those jobs trickled in since then. Loking ahead, about the
only possible bright spot is healthcare.
In other words, what was supposed to be excellent news, might really be a
nightmare. It took 810,000 additional jobs just to produce anemic real
GDP growth of 2.6% during the second quarter. Subtracting CPI distortions,
hedonics, imputations etc, the reported 2.6% growth is likely at or under the
stall rate. This brings to mind additional questions.
Still More Questions
- If the BLS was underestimating jobs created for March 2005 thru March 2006
by 810,000 then how much are they overestimating jobs by now if the economy
has turned?
- If the Fed is basing some of its interest rates decisions on jobs, just
how far behind the curve were they in tightening and how far ahead of the
curve are they now?
- If the Fed was aware that the economy was 810,000 jobs stronger than everyone
thought, when did they know it, and why didn't they comment on it?
Answers to the above questions would likely show the Fed has no business setting
rates at all. The Fed is forever in a pointless tail chasing exercise that
causes them to wildly overshoot in both directions. Unfortunately the Fed manages
interest rates on a day to day basis adding or draining reserves just to meet
their own arbitrary targets, when in fact they do not know the correct interest
rate any more than they know the correct day to day price of orange juice.
If perchance the economy really did create an extra 810,000 jobs in some sort
of housing/credit bubble blowoff top, that discrepancy will be unwound and
then some in the upcoming recession.
|