Updated February 2015
Every Thursday morning at 09:30 Eastern Time, the investment world gets a vague notion of what is happening in the American economy through the Initial Unemployment Claims data released by the Department of Labor. A recent paper by David Wiczer, an economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis provides us with some guidelines regarding the usefulness of the Initial Unemployment Claims data.
Every Thursday morning at 09:30 Eastern Time, the investment world gets a vague notion of what is happening in the American economy through the Initial Unemployment Claims data released by the Department of Labor. A recent paper by David Wiczer, an economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis provides us with some guidelines regarding the usefulness of the Initial Unemployment Claims data.
Let's start with a graph
from FRED showing the history of initial claims back to 1967:
During the last
recession, initial claims hit a peak of 665,000 at the end of March 2009 and
have since fallen to their current level of 297,000 in late November 2014.
The peak in March 2009 was the second highest level seen since 1967; in
October 1982, the nearly 50 year peak of 695,000 was hit, slightly above the
Great Recession peak. The current level of 297,000 is touted as being one of the
lowest levesl of new claims going back to February 2006, a rather significant
significant achievement, at least on the surface.
The author of the paper
notes that while the steady decline in the number of initial unemployment
insurance claims reflects an improving economy, it also reflects two other
issues:
2.) A trend of fewer
hires which still have not reached their pre-Great Recession levels as shown on
this graph:
Initial unemployment
claims are used as a proxy for the number of workers who are newly separated
from their jobs. If we look at this graph, we can see that the number of
new claims as a percentage of the total labor force is at its pre-Great
Recession level which, on the surface, would suggest that the economy has
healed:
However, this apparent
"healing" could be for two reasons:
1.) A decline in the
number of new claims.
2.) The fact that the
labor force has grown very little since the Great Recession.
The last graph shows us
that the level of new claims is lower than at any time during the 1980s and
most of the 1990s. There are long-term trends that affect the rate of new
claims that have nothing to do with an improved labor market since the 1980s.
For one, the drop in the level of new claims is a partly a result of
changes in legislation that have impacted the number of workers that are
eligible to collect unemployment insurance. This is quite clearly shown
on this graph that shows the declining fraction of unemployed workers that are covered by
UI in dark green:
The percentage of the
workforce that is covered by UI has dropped from over 4 percent at the end of the
Great Recession to 2 percent in mid-2013. This means that fewer newly
unemployed workers can apply for UI benefits and, as a result, they do not appear
in the weekly statistical Department of Labor roundup of new claims.
Secondly, as I noted above,
the rate of separations and hires have changed during the post-Great Recession
period as you can see on this graph:
Job separations are a poor predictor of changes to the unemployment rate. When unemployment
increases, it may increase because of an increase in the number of workers
separating from their jobs (voluntarily or involuntarily) or because currently
unemployed workers are finding new jobs at a lower rate. Work by other
economists shows that the employment exit/separation rate has steadily declined even
during recessional spikes in the unemployment rate. A study by Robert
Shimer shows that ninety-five percent of the increase in the
unemployment rate during the 1991 and 2001 recessions was a consequence of a
reduction in the job finding probability rather than being related to increases in the rate of
separations. Since the end of the Great Recession, as we can see on the previous graph, a low level of separations also corresponds to a low level of hires, suggesting that the idea that a low level of separations means a healthy job market is far from the truth in the post-Great Recession economy. During and since the Great Recession, the rate of separations fell along with the rate of hires meaning that there were fewer people to initiate unemployment insurance claims with no effect on unemployment.
As we can see, using the weekly jobless claims data is not a particularly reliable indicator of the employment situation in the United States. While it is tempting to use the weekly data release to give us a sense of how the economy has improved since 2008 - 2009, the conclusions of the author suggest that factors other than an improving job market may well be responsible for the apparent improvement in the number of new jobless claims.
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