Are The
Payroll Jobs Reports Merely Propaganda Statements?
By Paul
Craig Roberts
February
08, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- US economics statistics are so screwed up
that they do not provide an accurate picture.
Consider
the latest monthly payroll jobs report. According to
the report, in January 151,000 new jobs were
created. Where are these jobs? According to the
report, 69% of the new jobs are accounted for by
retail employment and waitresses and bartenders. If
we add in health care and social assistance, the
entirety of the new jobs are accounted for. This is
not the employment picture of a First World economy.
According
to the report, in January the retail sector added
57,700 jobs. Considering that January is the month
that followed a disappointing Christmas December, do
you think retailers added 57,700 employees? Such a
large increase in retail employment suggests an
expected rise in sales, but transportation and
warehousing lost 20,300 jobs and wholesale trade
added only 8,800.
Perhaps it
is mistaken to think that employment in these
sectors should move together. Possibly the retail
jobs, if they are real, are part-time jobs replacing
a smaller number of terminated full-time jobs in
order that employers can avoid benefits costs. If
this is the case, then the retail jobs are bad news,
not good news.
The
reported unemployment rate of 4.9% is misleading as
it does not count discouraged workers. When
discouraged workers are added, the actual rate of US
unemployment is about 23%, a number more consistent
with the decline in the labor force participation
rate. In January 2006 the labor force participation
rate was 66%. In January 2016 the labor force
participation rate is 62.7%.
The
government has a second official unemployment rate
that counts short-term discouraged workers
(discouraged for less than one year). That rate,
known as U-6, is 10%, twice the “headline rate”
which is always the U-3 measure that excludes all
discouraged workers not currently looking for a job.
In his
reports John Williams (shadowstats.com) explains
that the jobs reported can be an artifact of
seasonal adjustments. Perhaps a simple way of seeing
the influence of seasonal adjustments is to compare
the not seasonally adjusted jobs numbers for
December 2015 and January 2016. These numbers are
144,112,000 jobs in December and 141,123,000 jobs in
January, a decline of 2,989,000. However, with
seasonal adjustments the January number rises to
143,288,000 and the December number falls to
143,137,000, producing a January jobs gain of
151,000.
Payroll
jobs are the number of jobs, not the number of
employed people. Many of the payroll jobs are
part-time. In order to make ends meet, some people
hold two or more part-time jobs. In contrast to the
143,288,000 reported payroll jobs, civilian
full-time employment is about 123,000,000.
Another
factor that distorts the jobs reports is the
birth-death model. Based on John Williams’
expertise, I have often reported on this effort by
the BLS to estimate the net of unreported jobs
losses from business closures and the unreported
jobs gains of new start-ups. Here is John Williams
in his latest report on the January payroll jobs:
“Historically, an upside-bias process was created
for payroll-employment reporting simply by adding in
a monthly “bias factor,” so as to prevent the
otherwise potential political embarrassment to the
BLS of understating monthly jobs growth. The “bias
factor” process resulted from such an actual
reporting embarrassment, with the underestimation of
jobs growth coming out of the 1983 recession.
“That
process eventually was recast as the now infamous
Birth-Death Model (BDM), which purportedly models
the relative effects on payroll employment of jobs
creation due to new businesses starting up, versus
jobs lost due to bankruptcies or closings of
existing businesses.
“Separately
there is a preset upside bias, plus a presumed net
additional “surplus” of jobs added
on to the payroll estimates each month as a special
add-factor. In current reporting, the aggregate
average overstatement of monthly employment change
easily exceeds 200,000 jobs per month. These details
and section shall be updated fully in the pending
Supplement.”
The
assertion that the US economy has been in recovery
since June of 2009 is not consistent with the
quantity and quality of the jobs reflected in the
payroll jobs reports. The number of new jobs is not
sufficient to prevent the labor force participation
rate from declining, and the pay associated with the
jobs is not sufficient to leave consumers with
enough discretionary income to drive an economy
based on consumption.
The
financial presstitutes do not explore these issues.
They merely report the numbers that the official
releases emphasize and ask no questions about them.
Therefore, the decline in American economic
prospects receives no attention. The Federal Reserve
can even report that half of American 25 year-olds
live at home with their parents without causing
alarm. They do this not from choice but from
necessity. They simply cannot find jobs that pay
enough to support an independent existence. You
would think that this would be an issue of national
concern.
Dr.
Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury for Economic Policy and associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal. He was columnist
for Business Week, Scripps Howard News Service, and
Creators Syndicate. He has had many university
appointments. His internet columns have attracted a
worldwide following. Roberts' latest books are
The Failure
of Laissez Faire Capitalism and Economic Dissolution
of the West,
How America
Was Lost,
and
The
Neoconservative Threat to World Order.
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