Employment
Lies
By Paul Craig
Roberts
June 05,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- June 3, 2016. Today the Bureau of Labor Statistics
announced that the US economy only created 38,000
new jobs in May and revised down by 59,000 jobs the
previously reported gains in March and April.
Yet the BLS
reported that the unemployment rate fell from 5.0 to
4.7 percent, a figure generally regarded as full
employment.
The May
jobs increase only covers a small fraction of the
monthly growth in the labor force and, therefore,
cannot account for the drop in unemployment.
Moreover,
the BLS reported that the labor force participation
rate fell by 0.2 percentage points, bringing the
decline to 0.4 percentage points over the past two
months. Normally, a strong labor market, such as one
represented by a 4.7% unemployment rate, causes an
increase in the labor force participation rate.
The
question becomes: How real is the 4.7% rate of
unemployment?
The answer
is: Not at all.
The
unemployment rate dropped because people unable to
find jobs ceased looking and are no longer counted
as being in the labor force. If you are unemployed
but not considered part of the labor force, you are
not included when unemployment is measured. The BLS
says that in May there were 1.7 million Americans
who “wanted and were available for work,” but “were
not counted as unemployed because they had not
searched for work in the 4 weeks preceding the
survey.”
In other
words, the unemployment rate is a useless measure of
unemployment, just as the consumer price index no
longer measures inflation. What were once useful
statistical measures have been converted into good
news propaganda.
Another
inconsistency is the BLS report that, despite the
low unemployment rate, in May almost another
one-half million Americans were forced into
part-time jobs as full-time employment was not
available.
The average
work week is no longer 40 hours. The shrinkage of
the average work week to 34.4 hours (May) is another
reason for declining real median family income.
Assuming 3 weeks of vacation, a 34.4 hour work week
is 274.4 hours less per year. At $20 per hour, for
example, a 34.4 hour work week produces $5,488 less
annual income than a 40 hour week.
The loss of
annual income is greater for many. The average is a
result of shorter and longer work weeks. The shorter
work weeks that pull down the average are not
full-time jobs and therefore do not receive health
and pension benefits.
Just as
Washington and the presstitute media lie about
everything else, they lie about the economy.
The United
States of America has been reduced to a House of
Cards whose foundation is lies.
How long
can it stand?
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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