Posts tagged december

The Trouble with the December Jobs Report

There’s certainly good reason to cheer the latest employment figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics—according to this morning’s jobs report, the economy added 200,000 net jobs in December, bringing the headline unemployment rate down to 8.5 percent, the lowest level in nearly three years. Still, the public sector continued to shed jobs, with budget shortfalls forcing state and local governments to layoff another 12,000 employees, for a total of 280,000 fewer government jobs in 2011.

And while employment gains were felt widely throughout the private sector, with new hires in transportation and warehousing, retail trade, manufacturing, health care and mining, among others—job security remains weak for many millions of Americans. The U6 unemployment rate—which measures formal unemployment as well as marginally attached workers and workers who are part-time but wish to be full-time—remains uncomfortably high at 15.6 percent, despite dropping nearly one and a half percent from this time last year.

U6 rate

And though 1.6 million new jobs were added in 2011, workers saw virtually no gains in the number of hours they could work, leading about 150,000 people to take on multiple jobs to make ends meet. The long-term unemployment rate dropped slightly but remains at historic highs, while 1.5 million Americans dropped out of the labor force entirely, bringing the participation rate to historic lows. That means that the unemployment rate is artificially depressed, and will likely increase or plateau as a broader economic recovery encourages millions of labor force drop-outs to start looking for jobs again.

Long term unemployment rate

Labor force participation rate
Of course, there are plenty of reasons to applaud today’s jobs report—this is the sixth straight month that we have seen over 100,000 workers rejoin the work force, a statistic that is sure to help President Obama in his quest for reelection. But a healthy dose of negativity is a helpful reminder that millions of Americans remain outside our more conventional metrics of economic well-being, and despite the currently upbeat media narrative, they still need support. Extending the payroll tax-cut, for instance, will go a long way towards maintaining this momentum, as will a new round of stimulus for infrastructure investments. The optics on the economy may be shifting in favor of the President, but too many Americans are still struggling to get back on their feet to let such policy opportunities slide.