Pages

Friday, July 5, 2013

Unemployment Improves for Young Women ... For The Rest of Us, The News Isn't Good

Today's unemployment report was better than anticipated on several fronts.

In particular, young women aged 20-24 did very well. In contrast, the much broader 25-54 component of all people continued its woeful ways.

Hold the Champagne: Jobs Market isn't better yet has the summary:

"In any jobs report, there are always numbers and trends that would justify almost any opinion about the economy. Some things are improving, and some are standing still or getting worse. Today’s jobs report is no exception.

What’s getting better: The economy created 195,000 jobs in June, while April and May’s payroll figures were revised higher. Over the past six months, payrolls have increased by an average of 202,000 per month. That’s substantially better than the 130,000 pace the Fed was looking at in September when it implemented QE3.

The unemployment rate didn’t fall in June, but it remained at 7.6% for the best of reasons: 177,000 people joined the labor force. That’s important, because the unemployment rate has been falling because people get too discouraged to look for work. The fact that the labor force increased in June is a sign that people are more confident of landing a job. They are more willing to stick their toe in the water.
The growth in the labor force meant two other important measures of the labor market also improved. The labor-force participation rate (which measures the percentage of adults who are working or looking for work) rose by a tenth to 63.5%, and the employment-population ratio (which measures the percentage of adults who are working) rose by a tenth to 58.7%.
The growth in the labor force is good news for the Fed, but it’s too early to break out the bubbly. The employment-population ratio is no better today than it was in September 2012, when QE3 began.

Most of the job growth (and the growth in the labor force) in June came from one demographic group: Women between 20 and 24. It’s very good news that young women are finding work; young people have been very badly hurt by the sluggish recovery.

But the downside is that most other groups saw no improvement at all in June, or in recent months. The labor market for those in their prime working years of 25 to 54 didn’t get better in June, and has barely improved in the past year.
In the past 12 months, 1.6 million more Americans have jobs, but the number of working Americans between 25 and 55 has increased by just 350,000. Most of the job growth has benefited older Americans, who got 1.1 million of those jobs.

The economy is still failing to create jobs for all who want to work. There are about 18.4 million Americans who’d like to land a job (11.8 million counted as officially unemployed, plus 6.6 million who aren’t in the labor force but who want to work); last September, it was 18.8 million.

I don’t call that “substantial improvement” in the labor market. Keep the Champagne on ice."
Summing Up
Progress is progress, and we're making some progress on getting more people work.
That said, for far too many of our fellow citizens, they are still in a world of hurt with no end in sight.
Unfortunately, our elitist government knows best gang seems to be doing everything it can to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory when it comes to economic recovery and job creation.
And sadly, look for more of that politically nauseous behavior through the 2014 election and beyond.
That's my take. even though I very much hope I'm wrong.
Thanks. Bob.

No comments:

Post a Comment