Employment: The Three-Eighths Solution

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Professor Bob Higgs at the Independent Institute makes an interesting observation about employment: despite all the good news we are only three-eighths recovered from the pre-Crash high watermark. He cautions on how the data can be misleading.

This is reposted from the Independent Institute, with Prof. Higgs’s kind permission:

As the most widely reported rate of unemployment (U-3) has fallen in recent months, people with a political agenda served by painting a rosy picture of the recovery have made considerable noise about this decrease. Their political opponents have responded that one reason for the decline is that the labor force has fallen as more people have given up looking for work, some of them going into retirement sooner than they would have if the labor market had been more robust.

The best way to avoid the parsing and cherry-picking that plague such debates is to look not at unemployment, but at employment. After all, it’s employment that contributes to the production of goods and services and generates earnings for the job holders. Employment is less subject to interpretive ambiguity than unemployment is.

The most recently reported data on private nonfarm employment, for January 2012, show that employment has indeed continued its recovery. Since reaching its current-recession trough about two years ago, it has increased by about 3 million persons. Before starting a celebration, however, we should recognize that private nonfarm employment is still about 5 million persons less than it was at its pre-recession peak in 2008.

Moreover, such private employment is currently more than a million persons less than it was in December 2000, more than eleven years ago, on the eve of the dot-com bust. So, at this point, we have suffered more than the proverbial “lost decade” in the private labor market—the one in which employees are hired to produce goods and services that consumers and investors have demonstrated they actually value (or for which producers are convinced that such demand will be forthcoming).

To be sure, labor productivity has increased during this period, yet the likelihood is slight that sustained economic growth can take place in the future without long-term growth in private employment. A very large recession-related loss of private employment remains to be recouped, however, before we can even begin to think about the long-term growth of employment. The situation has improved somewhat in the past two years, no doubt, yet the labor market has a long way to go—it has about 5/8 of its recent loss to make up—merely to get back to its pre-recession peak.

Addendum I: Some recent survey evidence on why small businesses are not hiring [here].

Although such evidence must always be interpreted with extreme care, giving due attention to how the questions are framed, what the sampling design is, and so forth, it seems clear that uncertainties related to the future costs of Obamacare and other regulations are a significant factor in deterring hiring. Note, too, that when businesses are not hiring because they do not foresee sufficient demand to justify expanding their payroll, this reason may also reflect indirectly the effect of regime uncertainty, which may depress demands by the surveyed small businesses’ potential customers.

Addendum II: U.S. population grew by 9.7 percent between 2000 and 2010. In recent decades the annual rate of growth has averaged approximately 1 percent per year.

 

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5 comments to Employment: The Three-Eighths Solution

  • Hans

    This is certainly a more accurate way to judge employment levels, than having to figure who left the job ranks or who returned…

  • Pedro

    You haven’t adjusted for the huge number of new entries into the work force.

    We need at least 2.4 million new jobs annually to simply absorb first-time job seekers.

  • The Fed needs to get bullish and aggressive, and yes all federal regulations and taxes that deter business should be stripped back.

    Often forgotten are the many state and local regs that throttle business as well. The worst abusers of business formation and free enterprise are state and local governments. And tell me, why does every state license lawyers? Too boost free enterprise? To lower legal bills?

    And can I build a sky rise condo inn Newport Beach, a GOP stronghold? It ain’t the Feds stopping me–it is local government.

    Regime Uncertainty is a peek-a-boo Fed that has all the direction of a blind dog in a meat house. The Fed needs to resolutely and transparently target nominal GDP growth with every tool in its arsenal, from QE to IOR to interest rates.

    The Fed and the economics profession needs to peevishly fixate not on inflation, but real growth.

  • Gary Clayton

    I wonder how much illegal immigration has affected the job numbers in the last 10 years?

    • Don’t know Gary, but after the Alabama law was passed, many illegals left the state and now farmers are finding they can’t find enough people to harvest the crops.