Updated March 6, 2014
Let's open this posting by looking at a graph from FRED showing what has happened to the unemployment rate since record-keeping began in 1948:
Let's open this posting by looking at a graph from FRED showing what has happened to the unemployment rate since record-keeping began in 1948:
There is no doubt that the recovery
in employment since the depths of the Great Recession has been rather stunning,
dropping from a peak of 10 percent in October 2009 to its current level of 6.6 percent. However, as you can readily see on the graph, the rate is still between
1.5 and 2 percentage points higher than the lows normally seen during a
recovery and, in fact, the current rate is still nearly a percentage point
higher than the 65 year average of 5.8 percent through both recessions and
recoveries.
Unfortunately, as Dr. Heidi Shierholz, an
economist with the Economic Policy Institute notes, most of the improvement in
America's unemployment rate has been for the wrong reasons, largely because the
current method of calculating the rate vastly understates the problem.
Here is how the Bureau of Labor Statistics
defines unemployment:
"Persons
are classified as unemployed if they do not have a job, have actively looked
for work in the prior 4 weeks, and are currently available for work. Actively
looking for work may consist of any of the following activities:
Contacting an employer
directly or having a job interview
Contacting a public or
private employment agency
Contacting friends or
relatives
Contacting a school or
university employment center
Sending out resumes or
filling out job applications
Placing or answering
advertisements
Checking union or
professional registers
Some other means of
active job search
Passive
methods of job search do not have the potential to result in a job offer and
therefore do not qualify as active job search methods. Examples of passive
methods include attending a job training program or course, or merely reading
about job openings that are posted in newspapers or on the Internet.
Workers
expecting to be recalled from temporary layoff are counted as unemployed,
whether or not they have engaged in a specific jobseeking activity. In all
other cases, the individual must have been engaged in at least one active job
search activity in the 4 weeks preceding the interview and be available for
work (except for temporary illness)."
Basically, if you
haven't looked for work in the four weeks prior to the BLS survey, you drop off
their radar and are not considered "unemployed". Quite often,
these workers are not looking for work because job opportunities do not exist
and can be termed as "missing workers".
Dr. Shierholz notes that estimating
the number of missing workers is not easy, largely because changes in America's
labor force participation rate have nothing to do with the weak jobs market.
One example of this is the growing number of baby boomers who are
reaching retirement age and permanently leaving the labor force (although some
economists suggest that this factor is not having as significant an impact on
labor force participation as one might think). By using labor force
projections from the 2007 BLS publication "Labor force projections to 2016: more workers in their golden years",
one can get a sense of where the labor force participation rate would have been
heading based on retiring baby boomers alone (i.e. structural changes in the
size of the labor force). Using the difference between these projections and
the current labor force participation rate data, one can calculate the cyclical
change (drop) in the labor force participation rate that is due to the weak
labor market following the Great Recession. The size of the potential
labor force is then calculated by multiplying the current month's structural
labor force participation rate by the actual population numbers and then
subtracting the actual size of the labor force, thus yielding the number of
"missing workers".
In February 2014, the 5,850,000 "missing workers" were composed of
the following:
Men under 25 years of age: 970,000
Men 25 to 54 years of age: 1,670,000
Men over 55 years of age: 600,000
Women under 25 years of age: 390,000
Women 25 to 54 years of age: 1,180,000
Women over 55 years of age: 1,040,000
Here is a graph showing how the
official U-3 unemployment rate is significantly understating the scale of America's
unemployment problems when the missing workers are added to the BLS-defined
unemployed:
The unemployment rate takes a
substantial jump from what appears to be a reasonably healthy 6.6 percent to 10.0 percent. As well, it is quite
apparent that the recovery in the unemployment rate when "missing workers" are included is not nearly as
substantial since the end of the Great Recession as it is in the case of the
U-3 statistics. When "missing workers" are included, the peak unemployment
rate hit 11.5 percent in December 2009 and November 2010 (compared to 9.9
percent and 9.8 percent U-3 respectively) and has only dropped 1.5 percentage
points to its current level. This compares to a 3.4 percentage point
drop in the headline U-3 unemployment rate. In other words, Ben Bernanke's experiment has more or less been a total dud.
As we can clearly see, the headline
monthly U-3 rate is misleading non-thinkers and the mainstream media into believing that the U.S.
economy really is on the mend. In fact, it is the confluence of several
factors that are "conspiring" to artificially suppress the
unemployment rate. Economic reality is far more painful, as millions of Americans can attest.
Spot on! Again I thank you. It is very difficult to read between the lines and find the flaws in the numbers often being given to us. Many people feel something is wrong but just can't pinpoint the problem. The recent slowing of job growth signals even more problems ahead as pointed out in the post below.
ReplyDeletehttp://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2014/01/slower-job-growth-red-flag.html
Just as important as the slow job growth is the poor quality and number of part time jobs. Many people have taken job cuts.
ReplyDeleteDo you think they had to redefine the definition of unemployed so people would be more at ease and lulled into a false sense of security?
ReplyDeleteSee http://www.shadowstats.com/ for more information on this topic, et al.
ReplyDeleteHonesty a funny thing happened at my part-time job the other day and it scared me alittle. I work two jobs one pays 27$, the other 10$ per hour. 27$ per hour job is my full time employment so I live pay check to pay check (wife hasn't worked in 4 years) But I do have cable and internet (perks if you will of life) food and rent gets paid on time. Anyway I was on break(10$ per hour job) two of my other co-workers were also on break I had a pile of food in front of me i was happly eating and these other two were just watching me and I asked them why they were getting anything to eat, well niether could afford to they told me. (we at this job just got paid 2 days before) but their money was already gone. Later on so it wouldn't obvious I asked each of them what happened to their money and it was heating bill for one and Food for the house with the other. But the food for the house guy had in only 2 days eaten all that food.(not just him but others in that house also) Both these guys work partime and make about 9 dollars an hour and are going hungry 2 days after pay day. Scary. Hunger can drive people mad.
ReplyDeleteThanks to you all for your comments. We certainly live in a unique time when headline economic statistics are proving to be reflecting an alternate reality that none of us live in!
ReplyDeleteAnother factoid a lot of people aren't aware of is: if someone in America works ONE day, like unloads a truck via a local Labor Ready or casual day labor center, the state and federal Labor Depts then list that as one job "created" for that fiscal quarter.
ReplyDeleteThe Dept of Labor stats are ridiculously skewed, have been since the Clinton Administration. It's extremely political. You even see state that are 'blue' reporting lower unemployment if there is a Dem in the White House and converse 'red' states will report higher unemployment rates with a Dem in office.
I'm wondering why you start your data in the 1940s, and not with the Great Depression, which is the economic collapse most like the recent collapse.
ReplyDeleteThis may be another way of getting to what you are saying. Here is how the BLS describes its way of identifying those who are NOT actively looking for work: ". . .merely reading about job openings that are posted in newspapers or on the Internet."
ReplyDeleteWe have seen a growing disparity between the U-3 and the U-6, with the former now being only 52% of the latter -- in contrast to rates as high as 58% in the past. Not counting those who consistently look at the internet today may be under-counting those who, in fairness, are actively looking for work because internet databases, including Craigslist, Indeed, Monsterboard and employer's lown websites, are far more comprehensive than they used to be. From an efficiency standpoint for many jobs, checking the Internet every few days is the best way to actively look for a job.
Also note that while "discouraged workers" is obviously a partial measure at best -- gaps in employment-to-population ratio give a better feel for the phenomenon -- those reporting they are discouraged are still double what they were before the crash, even triple what they were in the last really strong labor market in 2000.