The Job Openings and Labor Turnover
Survey (JOLTS) provides us with an interesting insight into America's job
market. According to the January
2014 data release, there was an increase in the number of total private
and government sector job openings, hitting 4.001 million in November 2013 as
shown here:
Note that this level is still nearly
500,000 job openings short of the level in back in 2006 - 2007.
That said, as you can see on this graph from FRED, that while the total
number of job openings is up from a year ago, the number of hires is up very
slightly on a year-over-year basis and is nearly 20 percent below the levels
seen before the Great Recession, factors that are particularly concerning given
that the economy is supposed to be much stronger this year than last:
According to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, there were 10.4 million job seekers in December 2013.
With only 4 million job openings available, that means that there were
2.6 job seekers for every job available.
Here is a graph showing the number
of unemployed workers divided by the number of job openings (i.e. the number of potential applicants for each available job opening):
Just prior to the Great Recession,
over the period between the beginning of 2006 and the middle of 2007, there
were between 1.5 and 1.6 unemployed Americans for every job opening. The
low point was hit in March 2007 when there were only 1.43 unemployed Americans
for every job opening. During and after the Great Recession, this ratio
rose quickly, hitting a peak of 6.7 unemployed for every job opening in
July 2009. Since then, it has fallen rather substantially, however, as
you can see from the graph, the current ratio is still worse than just about
any time since December 2000, excluding the Great Recession.
In actuality, the situation is far worse
than these numbers show. If Americans that are neither employed nor
looking for work because of the weak labor market were added to the 10.4
million officially unemployed (the U3 unemployed), the ratio between job
seekers and job openings would look far worse. Estimates
suggest that there are at least 6 million additional potential workers out
there that will enter or reenter the job market once the economy looks stronger
or desperation for income sets in. If the number of job openings does not
grow or even if it grows to the level seen before the Great Recession, the
ratio between job seekers and job openings could rise from its current level of
2.6 to between 3.4 and 4.0, a level that has not been seen in years between
2001 and 2008.
From this data, we can see that
America's job market is caught between a rock and a hard place.
Relatively low levels of job openings and a large number of officially unemployed plus the potential
addition of millions of workers to the labor pool will make the job market
extremely competitive, even if the economic expansion strengthens and the number
of job openings increase. Unless the number of hires increases to pre-Great Recession levels, the competition for the relatively sparse number of jobs will continue to make life difficult for out-of-work Americans.
Why doesn't the government economists use this economic formula?
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