labor force

The Labor Report Looks Much Different Without Such High Positive Variation

By |2016-06-03T12:30:04-04:00June 3rd, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The payroll report missed badly, as the headline “job creation” number gained only 38k in May 2016. That was the lowest monthly gain of the entire “recovery.” Last month’s figure, which had already caused significant angst, was revised even lower to just 123k. The mainstream is predictably apoplectic, and why wouldn’t it be? After all, month after month after month [...]

Nothing Has Changed Though Payrolls Show Up Ugly This Month

By |2016-05-06T12:30:40-04:00May 6th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Wall Street is predictably overreacting to the unpleasant payroll report. It is understandable in a way since, as noted yesterday, the Establishment Survey and the unemployment rate are all that is left to suggest the economy remains on track and any weakness would be temporary. It was a strained position to begin with, especially since the economy shifted lower almost two [...]

More Bad News For Those Using The Unemployment Rate As An Economic Shield

By |2016-04-19T13:35:31-04:00April 19th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

No matter how bad the economy seems to get elsewhere in various data series, the unemployment rate and the common assessment of the labor market (provided by the Establishment Survey) usually prevails. It has become almost a template where any description of the offending economic account will attach some version of, “X was down unexpectedly but should only be temporary [...]

Unemployment Rate Doesn’t Fit JOLTS, Either

By |2016-03-17T18:19:38-04:00March 17th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The latest JOLTS update finds total hires in January down by a rather large 372k, leaving the monthly seasonally-adjusted rate at still 5 million. Given that the estimated hires rate increased unusually in December, it seems as if January was the statistical catchup or seasonal give-back. That leaves intact the same sideways pattern that first appeared around October 2014. Throughout [...]

Retailers Are Going Nuts (To the BLS)

By |2016-03-07T15:04:51-05:00March 7th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Going only from the conventional interpretation of the optimistic 242,000 in payroll gains Friday, it is still remarkable how more than one-fifth of those purported job creations in February were due to activity in retail trade alone. The monthly variation estimate for the retail sector (not including wholesale or transportation of goods) was an especially robust +55k even though the [...]

Full Wages, Updated

By |2016-03-04T16:40:18-05:00March 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Having established the farcical nature of wage interpretations on the shortest time scale, a wider contextual framework leads in the same direction of doubt. The point of any interest rate hike for monetary policymakers is to head off “inflation” before it gets out of hand; the economy “overheating.” Having undertaken sufficient (it is assumed) stimulus to surpass whatever hysteresis calculations, [...]

The Statistical Spectacle of Payroll Friday

By |2016-03-04T11:36:12-05:00March 4th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The February payroll estimate for the Establishment Survey was 242,000 with upward revisions to December and January, so we are told the labor market is surging once more. Last month when the Establishment Survey suggested “only” 151,000 (before revisions) it was taken as disappointing even though there is statistically no difference between 151k and 242k (a 90% confidence interval leaves [...]

Perfect Payrolls Again; Unremarkable And Irrelevant

By |2016-01-08T13:24:14-05:00January 8th, 2016|Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I think it entirely fitting, even useful in the long run, that December’s payroll report was yet another perfect month; the fourth of 2015 by my unofficial count. There was absolutely nothing wrong with any of the components, at least in the raw job count estimated by various statistical regressions and adjusted with imputations (wages, not so much). The problem [...]

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