Non-Farm Payrolls Increased 169,000 in August vs Consensus Expected 180,000 To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury - Chief Economist
Bob Stein, CFA - Deputy Chief Economist
Date: 9/6/2013
Non-farm payrolls increased 169,000 in August versus a consensus expected 180,000. Including downward revisions to prior months, nonfarm payrolls were up 95,000.
Private sector payrolls increased 152,000 in August (+116,000 including revisions to prior months), lagging the consensus expected 180,000. The largest gains were for retail (+44,000), health care (+33,000), and restaurants & bars (+21,000). Government payrolls rose 17,000.
The unemployment rate declined to 7.3% (7.278% unrounded) from 7.4% (7.390% unrounded).
Average weekly earnings – cash earnings, excluding benefits – increased 0.2% in August and are up 2.2% from a year ago.
Implications: Something for everyone in today’s report. Data that was weaker than the consensus expected (the payroll report) had strong details, while data that was stronger than expected (the unemployment rate) had weak details. Nonfarm payrolls increased 169,000 in August but only 95,000 including downward revisions to June/July. Very mediocre. However, average weekly hours ticked up and, as a result, total hours worked were up 0.4% in August. If the number of hours per worker were unchanged, a 0.4% gain in total hours would mean a 450,000 gain in payrolls. So we don’t think today’s report indicates a lack of demand for labor. The unemployment rate dropped to 7.3%, the lowest so far this recovery, but it was the result of a 312,000 drop in the labor force. Civilian employment, an alternative measure of jobs that includes small business start-ups, declined 115,000. As a result, the labor force participation rate fell to 63.2%, the lowest since 1978. It’s important to note, however, that the population keeps increasing, so even though the participation rate is so low, the labor force itself is up 718,000 in the past year even as the unemployment rate has dropped 0.8 points. One recent debate is about part-time work. Through July, part-timers were up 692,000 so far this year, a very large share of job gains in 2013. However, part-timers were down 123,000 in August. Either way, we think part-time data need to be handled carefully given volatility. We prefer looking at it over periods of a year. In the past twelve months, part-timers have increased 253,000, which is only 13% of all job gains. However, we can’t help but notice that some of the largest recent payroll gains have been in sectors that lend themselves to part-time jobs. Retail, restaurants & bars, combined, now make up the largest share of private payrolls on record (going back to 1990) with a recent surge that started in April. Only time will tell for sure, but it’s hard to believe Obamacare has nothing to do with this. Firms in these sectors may be adding more jobs as a result, but doing it with part-time work. In terms of consumer spending, in the past year hours are up 2.4% while wages per hour are up 2.2%, for a 4.6% gain in cash earnings. After adjusting for inflation, these earnings are up 3% from a year ago, so workers are generating more purchasing power. The big question is how the Federal Reserve reacts to today’s report. We think the numbers still support tapering in September. Obviously, the labor market is far from perfect. What’s holding us back is the huge increase in government, particularly transfer payments, over the past several years. Despite that, entrepreneurs and workers are gritting out a recovery and the Plow Horse economy keeps moving forward.
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THE FOUNDATION
"This gave me occasion to observe, that when Men are employ'd they are best contented." --Benjamin Franklin
ECONOMY
Recovery Bummer
At first blush, today's jobs report once again seems to contain good news: 169,000 jobs added and unemployment dropping a tenth of a point to 7.3%, the lowest since December 2008. But beware what we call the "headline" numbers. The Leftmedia employes them to bolster the sorry record of their man in the White House.
Digging deeper, we find trouble quickly. July numbers were revised down from 162,000 to just 104,000, and June was revised down for the second time. The unemployment rate fell once again only because so many people are giving up looking for work -- 312,000, or nearly twice the number who found work -- and they aren't counted in the report. The labor participation rate fell to 63.2%, the lowest since Jimmy Carter's malaise days of August 1978. If labor participation remained at the same level it was in January 2009, the headline unemployment rate would be 10.8%. It would be 7.7% if participation was the same as just one year ago.
As for the U-6 fuller measure, Hot Air's Ed Morrissey observes that it "dropped from 14.0% to 13.7%, its lowest level in five years." But, he warns, "[T]hat has to do with the shrinking workforce, too. In order to be counted in U-6, workers have to be at least marginally attached to the labor force. That's defined as 'those who currently are neither working nor looking for work but indicate that they want and are available for a job and have looked for work sometime in the past 12 months.'"
Meanwhile, Barack Obama and his crack shot economic team promised that if we just passed the "stimulus" unemployment would be 5% by now.
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http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/09/06/u-s-unemployment-nuges-down-slightly/Unemployment rate is 10.8%