Updated February 2014
The most commonly reported unemployment rate is U-3, defined as the total percentage of the civilian labor force that is unemployed. This rate does not include unemployed workers who have been discouraged and given up on the idea that they will be able to get a job.
The most commonly reported unemployment rate is U-3, defined as the total percentage of the civilian labor force that is unemployed. This rate does not include unemployed workers who have been discouraged and given up on the idea that they will be able to get a job.
Now that we have the headline
definition of unemployment in mind, I want to look at three of the factors that are coming into play that may be distorting the BLS unemployment numbers; the growing size of the labor force, the civilian employment-to-population ratio and the civilian labor force participation rate. Let's start this posting by looking at the
size of the civilian labor force (i.e. those Americans that want to work, are
looking for a job or are currently working) as shown on this graph from FRED:
At the end of November 2013, there
were 155.294 million Americans in the labor force.
Let's take a closer look at what has
happened to the labor force since its nadir just after the end of the Great
Recession:
At its low point in December 2009,
there were only 153.120 million Americans in the labor force. Over the 48
months between December 2009 and November 2013, the labor force grew by 2.174
million potential workers or 45,290 potential workers every month. This
means that in order for the U-3 unemployment rate to remain steady, at least
45,290 jobs have to be created every month over the 48 month period to account for the growth in the labor force. It
is just common sense that, along with growth in the size of the population,
there will be growth in the number of people wanting to work.
Now, let's look at the civilian employment-to-population ratio from
FRED since the end of the Great Recession:
At the end of the latest recession,
the civilian employment-to-population ratio was 59.4 percent. This rate
fell fairly sharply in the last half of 2009 and has been in a range of between
58.2 and 58.7 percent ever since, a ratio that is among the lowest experienced
since the early 1980s. The past four and a half years has also been the longest period of time that the
ratio has seen virtually no growth all the way back to 1948 as shown here:
Now, let's look at the civilian labor force participation rate since
the end of the Great Recession:
The participation rate has fallen
from 65.7 percent in June 2009 to its current level of 63 percent, the lowest
level seen since the mid-1970s and is well below its 30 year average of 65.7
percent. While some are blaming this on retiring baby boomers, in fact,
as we see on this graph, the labor force participation rate for older
middle-aged Americans (in brown) is rising and is now at or near 65 year highs:
As you can clearly see, the labor force participation rate is dropping for younger Americans between the ages of 20 and 24, not for older Americans as is generally considered the cause of the dropping participation rate. This is certainly not a trend that will continue over the long-term. As well, perhaps the fact that baby boomers
are seeing the returns on their investments shrivel under the watchful eye of
Mr. Bernanke and his merry band of central bankers may have something to do with
the rising number of older middle-aged Americans who need to work to keep cat food on
the table.
Now, let's get to the meat of the matter. According to Zerohedge, the labor
force participation rate is severely understated for the aforementioned reasons and that the real unemployment
rate should be calculated using changes (i.e. growth) in the size of the
overall working age, non-institutionalized population rather than the shrinking size of the labor force since, as
I noted in the first part of this posting, the civilian labor force continues
to grow. If, as Zerohedge suggests, we use a long-term labor force participation
rate of 65.8 percent, we can derive the implied unemployment rate. Basically, by applying a more
reasonable and realistic labor force participation rate that is nearly 3 percentage points higher than the reported rate, there are an additional 5 million potential labourers that should be added to the workforce. What this does is push the unemployment rate up because when they are included, there are now nearly 16 million unemployed Americans (the U-3 10.9 million plus the additional 5 million noted above). These unaccounted for Americans that would ultimately like to be in the labor force but
fall off the Bureau of Labor Statistics stringent definition of a
"laborer", would push the implied unemployment rate up by roughly 4.5 percentage
points over the BLS number, brining the real unemployment rate at around 11.5 percent rather than
the much ballyhooed headline 7 percent number.
While the mainstream media follows
the Fed's lead, going on endlessly about the improving jobs picture in the
American economy, it certainly appears that there are a number of factors at
play that may be temporarily distorting employment data in the United States and that reality is far worse than what we are being led to believe.
You are spot on. Another issue we should not forget is the quality of these jobs and that many are part time. In many ways a job paying $60,000 a year can be considered far more valuable then several paying only $15,000.
ReplyDeleteExactly, Bruce.
ReplyDeleteBut these analyses hold true historically as well, correct, obviously to different degrees at different points in time. If you believe the true rate is somewhere around 11.5%, can you plot this rate over the past 40 years as well to see how it compares? Needs context.
ReplyDeleteWhat about the growing number of people on "disability"?
ReplyDeleteSome of us who are disabled were in the work force dispite our disabilities. Now it is hard for even the able bodied to find work, the disabled have no chance. I have always worked, but now age and disability have made that impossible. No one will give me a second glance for a job. So I am on disability now. Not where I want to be.
DeleteThese numbers reflect the reality of a very weakened economy and jobs. But you will never see this in mainstream media because they support Obama and will use ever means to hide the facts. Unless they favor the administration. Its very sad that news cannot be reported as such and that the media must now manipulate facts and figures in order to paint a better picture. Of course then everyone is surprised when a negative figure must be released and then its damage control for the media. The student loan issues, the rising personal debt and stagnate incomes all mean a weak and fragile jobs and economy. If you care to ignore it, go ahead.
ReplyDeleteIt's getting worse. For December 2013 the U3 rate dropped to 6.7% primarily due to another big drop in participation. It's now at 62.8%, meaning that the above number of 11.5% is lower than what it is now.
ReplyDeletePeople are becoming discouraged by the job creation because many jobs are not paying enough. The economy won't work well if we cannot create more good jobs. We see how this affects retailers and we see how reality strikes back on job numbers. This economy is going nowhere and you see how disinterested Obama or Congress is. They are content with dismal numbers as long as they can deceive the American people with filtered numbers. Which appears then to make the problems look much less severe. I think though the lack of transparency is beginning to show its true colors.
ReplyDeleteAbout Washington DC Elites, labor participation rates and their staff members: more than half of all 435-odd Congressional Elites are millionaires. Some Washington DC Elite staff personnel are pulling down outrageous salaries of more than $500,000 per year.
ReplyDeleteWhere are audits of this abuse? Some Congressional types have career jobs spanning more than three decades. Insider Trading is rampant...every Congressional and Senatorial type is skirting imposed Wall Street sanctions..to their individual benefits. "Sweet-heart" real estate deals are rife throughout ALL of Washington DC's Elites. Doing the Peoples work is an euphemism to these corrupt lawmakers. Highest real estate prices are in??? Yep, you guessed it The Beltway. Time to clean this slime... including the BLS. Pray. Amen. Join a Tea Party.
arg. The Tea Party the only good thing about them is they seem to vote what they feel is right, l beyond I don't agree with almost any of their stances. (Gun Rights would be the only one) Other than that they come off as backwards rednecks that thing somehow they can return clock to the 1950s and rid the US of the brown/black folks that are causing all the problems in their minds. You are right about needing to clean up Washington though and campaign finance reform would be a start, followed by open sessions for lobbyist ei a record is kept of the conversations and by law no meeting lobbyists outside of that open setting.
ReplyDeleteThis is an unfair stab at Ben Bernanke, "baby boomers are seeing the returns on their investments shrivel under the watchful eye of Mr. Bernanke and his merry band of central bankers". It is out of context of the refusal of Congress to pass enough and more stimulus. It was responsible of Bernanke to do what he could.
ReplyDeleteWhat we need still, is to spend money build transportation (roads), schools and research, for citizens.
DeleteThat last graph doesn't support the inference you took from it. Baby boomers retiring doesn't shrink the workforce because the rate at which 55-64 people are in the workforce goes down. It shrinks the workforce because the ratio of people in the 55-64 bucket and the 65+ bucket is getting larger relative to the ratio of people in the less than 55 bucket. If you take 1M people from the 20-24 bucket and move them to the 55-64 bucket the labor force shrinks regardless of a shrinking gap between those lines.
ReplyDelete