Wednesday, May 9, 2012

A Marginal Improvement in Employment? Maybe.

May 7, 20012 April’s Non-Farm Employment Report showed an increase of 115,000 jobs plus an additional 59,000 jobs in revisions for February and March. Unemployment rate dropped to 8.1% (due to reductions in labor force participation.) This is a marginal improvement because it exceeds the estimated number of new people entering the labor force each month. Also, long-term this number is very important; but this data point is a lagging indicator not a leading indicator. The two leading indicators in this report: (1) wages, which were unchanged (negative if inflation included) and (2) hours worked which was unchanged as well at 34.5 hours per week. The net result was a very weak report. This means both political parties will shout that something has to be done. The Keynesian-Left wants the government to borrow even more money for another round of stimulus to “fill the gap” in consumer spending; and then reduce spending sometime in the future. The Keynesian-Right wants the government to borrow even more money to reduce taxes and stimulate supply; and then reduce spending sometime in the future. Do you think the economists or the politicians really know what supply and demand means or how it works? If they did, they would attack the cause rather than the symptom. There are a couple of real concerns however in this jobs report. One is that the model used to seasonally adjust this data has not been adjusted for the warm winter whether. The seasonally adjusted model has now added about 4.9 million jobs (jobs the government expects will materialize in the future) which will be re-adjusted (removed) from the actual numbers later in the year. Hopefully that will happen. The other concern is that we are loosing full-time jobs (-812,000 in April) and replacing them with part-time jobs (+508,000 in April). What kinds of jobs are being created? This trend has been going on for some time now. This may also be a reason that wages are not moving higher. With 90,000 people entering the workforce each month, and an election only months away, this slow jobs growth problem will become very important. Can you say QE3?

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