A recent article on the Federal Reserve Bank of
Atlanta's website by Dave Altig, the Atlanta Fed's Executive Vice President
and Research Director, discusses the issue of the declining labor force
participation rate and provides us with an explanation for the decline as I
will outline in this posting.
This graph from FRED quite clearly shows the
decline:
The
labor force participation rate peaked at 67.1 percent between the years of 1997
and 2000 and has fallen rather steadily since then to a 17 year low of 64.7
percent. The fall has been most dramatic since the Great Recession; the
rate has dropped from 66 percent in 2008 to 63.6 percent in April 2012 as shown
on this chart:
Here is a less looked at labor force
participation graph showing the participation rate for men:
Male
labor force participation peaked at 87.4 percent in October 1949 and has fallen
steadily to 70 percent in April 2012, a drop of 19.9 percent.
Here
is the labor force participation graph showing the participation rate for
women which looks completely different:
Back
in the late 1940s when men's participation rate was peaking, only 33 percent of
women were in the workforce. Women's participation rate peaked at 60.3
percent in April 2000 and has slowly fallen to 57.6 percent in April 2012, a
drop of only 4.5 percent.
Here
are two more graphs. The first graph shows the labor force participation
rate for those 25 years and older with less than a high school diploma:
This
data in this graph shows that the labor force participation rate for these
Americans is currently 45.2 percent, down only 6.2 percent from its 20 year
peak in October 2008. I found that rather surprising considering that
Americans without a high school diploma have generally been considered among
the least likely to have regained employment since the end of the Great
Recession. That said, it is interesting to see that their participation
rate is 18.4 percentage points (or 28.9 percent) below that of the general
population.
This
final graph shows the labor force participation
rate for those 25 years and older with a Bachelor's degree or higher:
The
participation rate for these Americans peaked at 81.9 percent in July 1992 and
June 1993 and has fallen rather steadily to its April 2012 level of 76.2
percent, just off its 20 year low of 75.6 percent achieved in January 2012. Surprisingly,
since the end of the Great Recession in June 2009, the participation rate for
more educated Americans has dropped by 1.8 percentage points. While this
looks rather unsettling, recall that the labor force participation rate for
those Americans without a high school diploma in April 2012 was 31 percentage
points lower.
Back
to the Federal Reserve's analysis. Many mainstream and non-mainstream
journalists have attempted to resolve the issues behind the drop in the labor
force participation rate. The author notes that the decline in the
headline unemployment rate from March (8.2 percent) to April (8.1 percent) was
driven by yet another decline in the labor force participation rate. Why
is the participation rate falling and how much impact is this having on the
unemployment rate?
Staff
at the Federal Reserve have calculated that if the labor force participation
rate had remained constant from March to April of 2012 instead of falling, that
the unemployment rate would actually have risen to 8.4 percent rather than
falling to 8.1 percent.
Why
is the labor force participation rate falling? Many people feel that the
current job market is so poor that unemployed Americans are simply giving up
and falling off the Bureau of Labor Statistics' radar. Mr. Altig notes
that at least some of the decline in the participation rate is due to
population aging as older workers retire and remove themselves from the workforce.
Here is a chart from the article showing the impact of demographic
changes on the labor force participation rate:
Since
the beginning of the Great Recession, the labor force participation rate has
dropped by 2.4 percentage points. The Atlanta Fed estimates that 40
percent of the changes in the participation rate can be accounted for by
changes in the age and composition of the population. Since the beginning
of the Great Recession, 0.9 percentage points of the decline in the
participation rate can be explained away by the aging of baby boomers since the
labor force will grow more slowly than the total population aged 16 and older. If we look back at the FRED graph showing the participation rates by educational levels and gender, it becomes apparent that, if indeed Mr. Altig is correct, it is American males with a college degree that are responsible for the lion's share of retirements. As well, since
the participation rate fell by 2.4 percentage points, this leaves 1.5
percentage points unaccounted for. It is this 1.5 percentage point drop
that may well be due to cyclic unemployment (i.e. higher levels of unemployment
during a recession) that is becoming permanent structural unemployment (i.e.
jobs that are never regained even during an economic boom).
The
Federal Open Market Committee has projected that the unemployment rate would be
7.5 percent at the end of 2013. Mr. Altig proposes the following:
1.)
If the participation rate stays at 63.6 percent, the economy needs to create
144,036 jobs per month to reach an unemployment rate of 7.5 percent by the end
of 2013.
2.)
If the participation rate rises by the 1.5 percent that is unaccounted for by
demographic changes, the economy needs to create a whopping 304,260 jobs per
month to reach an unemployment rate of 7.5 percent by the end of 2013.
While it certainly would be wonderful if the unemployment
rate really did drop to 7.5 percent, a level that is still high by most
historical post-recessional standards, I suspect that the FOMC is dreaming in
technicolor. By the end of 2013, the world could well be in the grips of
another recession; at the very least, it is quite possible that within 18
months, the European debt influenza will find itself well established in the
world's economy, negatively impacting employment levels around the world.
The generation currently entering the workforce will not have their parents (baby boomers) standard of living; maybe something a little closer to the standard of living their grandparents (the great generation) had.
ReplyDeleteThen again, their parents (baby boomers) standard of living was largely based on a debt cycle.
I hope we can all reflect on the lives the great generation had; and use their humbleness as inspiration to live within our means. Because when we have to pay for the baby boomers social programs, and their debt mountains, the future does seem bleak.
I don't mean to single out any individual; and I mean no disrespect to the boomers (because you had a tough time finding employment as well in your day). I just wish to pay more tribute to the tough men and women who went through the depression, two world wars, and having to raise the messed up kids of the 60s and 70s!
JR
Don't forget the greatest generation benefited from the G.I. Bill, greater unionization and more job stability.
ReplyDeleteObama = Jimmy Carter
ReplyDelete@Anonymous: As long as we don't all have to start hording sugar packets from our local diner...
ReplyDeleteI am not sure I buy-in to the conclusion that retirements are a principal cause of the declining labor participation rate. There is little doubt this is a factor.
ReplyDeleteHowever, there are a significant number of individuals 55 years and older that are currently staying in the labor force that would have previously retired if there was not so much economic uncertainty today.
For example, the labor participation rate for for civilians 65 years and over with no disability is 23.8% today. It was 21.4% in late 2008.
For ages 55+ the labor participation rate is a little over 40% today. It was about 33% in 2001.
There are more older workers working today than at any time in recent memory. This does not seem to support the argument that retirements are driving the decline in the overall labor participation rate.
The author said:
ReplyDelete"The labor force participation rate peaked at 67.1 percent between the years of 1997 and 2000 and has fallen rather steadily since then to a 17 year low of 64.7 percent."
Looking at the referenced graph, the last time the participation rate was 64.7 percent was in about 1985; thus, it is a **27** year low as opposed to a 17 year low.
The author goes on to say that, based on the subsequent chart, the current labor participation rate is 63.6%. But based on the aforementioned graph, the last time the rate was so low was sometime in the mid to late 70s--as long as **35** years ago.
Not trying to be nit-picky here--just pointing out that the situation seems somewhat more dire than even the author (aka. Political Junkie) asserts in his text.