Updated June 2016
The mainstream media has spent a great deal of energy questioning whether the Federal Reserve should continue to resume interest rate increases during 2016. With the global economy looking rather shaky at best and the United States economy looking positively glowing when compared to its peers even though it is expanding at modest levels, the Fed is finding itself caught between a "monetary policy rock and hard place". As we all know, one of the Fed's mandates as established by Congress is to maximize employment. While the drop in unemployment from ten percent in October 2009 to its current level of five percent, it looks like the Fed has succeeded in meeting at least one part of its obligations, however, scratching slightly below the surface of the headline U-3 unemployment rate, we find that the Fed's long-term monetary policy experiment has been less than a resounding success when it comes to employment for America's prime-age workers.
The mainstream media has spent a great deal of energy questioning whether the Federal Reserve should continue to resume interest rate increases during 2016. With the global economy looking rather shaky at best and the United States economy looking positively glowing when compared to its peers even though it is expanding at modest levels, the Fed is finding itself caught between a "monetary policy rock and hard place". As we all know, one of the Fed's mandates as established by Congress is to maximize employment. While the drop in unemployment from ten percent in October 2009 to its current level of five percent, it looks like the Fed has succeeded in meeting at least one part of its obligations, however, scratching slightly below the surface of the headline U-3 unemployment rate, we find that the Fed's long-term monetary policy experiment has been less than a resounding success when it comes to employment for America's prime-age workers.
Here is a graph from FRED showing the
employment-to-population ratio since the late 1940s to help us put the current
ratio into perspective:
Here is the same data for
the period from the beginning of 2004 to the present:
The
employment-to-population ratio is defined as the ratio of total civilian
employment to the civilian non-institutional population. It is used to
track the pace of job creation and compare it to the rate of growth in the adult population.
As you can see, there was a precipitous drop in the civilian
employment-to-population ratio during the Great Recession, from a pre-recession
peak of 63.4 percent to a low of 58.2 percent in both 2010 and 2011.
Since its low point, it has only improved to its current level of 59.7
percent, an improvement of only 1.5 percentage points from its lows. A 2015
analysis by the Congressional Research Service suggests that
demographics are playing a significant role in this stubborn decline for two
reasons:
1.) retirement of older
workers (i.e. the baby boom generation).
2.) younger workers
pursuing or extending their education.
As a result, one would
expect that if younger and older workers were subtracted from the
employment-to-population ratio, the ratio for prime-age workers between the
ages of 25 and 54 would show that there is little remaining impact of the Great
Recession, particularly given the Fed's massive interference in what passes for the free market. With that in mind, here is the data from FRED showing what has
happened to the employment-to-population ratio for prime age workers since the
beginning of 2004:
The ratio for prime-age
workers hit a high of 80.3 percent at the beginning of 2007 and fell to a low
of 74.8 percent in late 2009 and 2010. Since then, it has recovered to
its current level of 77.7 percent, an improvement of 2.9 percentage points,
however, it is still 2.6 percentage points below its pre-Great Recession peak.
Let's do a bit of an
analysis of the data:
Low point - 74.8 percent
in November 2010
Current level - 77.7 percent in April 2016
Total Change - 2.9 percentage points
Time elapsed - 66 months
Average monthly
improvement - 0.044 percent per month
As long as there is no
economic slowdown or sudden economic growth spurt, it will take another 59 months for the prime-age
employment-to-population ratio to return to its pre-Great Recession level.
This begs the question -
how successful has nearly seven and a half years of Federal Reserve monetary
policy really been when it comes to meeting at least one of its
congressionally-mandated obligations? It would be my guess that millions
of prime-age American workers would unequivocally state that the Fed and its
long monetary policy have been an unqualified failure and that additional
interest rate increases should be off the table.
I don't know if you get this data but it would be interesting to see how many prime age folks are working part time but wanting to work full time. Certainly adding them to this information will make the picture even worse.
ReplyDeleteTake a look at the data from Calculated Risk on Government employment, Due to policies in congress and state houses, government employment is DOWN significantly and is only now starting to grow at a very slow rate. Compared to government jobs growth during the Reagan administration, current growth is miniscule. Everyone bitches about poor service from our governments, but agency budgets and workforces have been slashed.Take a look at the IRS. No one to even answer the phones. An uninformed electorate gets the government it deserves.
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