|
In October, private-sector payrolls
rebounded from a more modest gain in September, showing broad-based gains
across goods and service-producing industries. State and local education
hiring remained sluggish, but that effect appears to be diminishing through
the fall. Employers in October added 531,000 jobs, with private-sector
payrolls gaining 604,000 jobs, while the unemployment rate fell to 4.6
percent. The labor force participation rate fell to 61.6 percent, which
is the lowest labor force participation rate since January of 1977.
Here is a brief summary of the major economic indicators since the last
jobs numbers:
- The Producer Price Index
for final demand increased 0.6 percent in October;
- The Consumer Price Index
increased 0.9 percent in October;
- Real average hourly
earnings decreased six cents from September to October;
- Orders for durable goods
(including defense and aircraft) decreased 0.5 percent in October;
- New home sales increased
0.4 percent in October;
- The Price Index of U.S.
imports increased 1.2 percent in October;
- ISM Services Index
increased 4.8 percentage points to 66.7 percent in October;
- ISM Manufacturing Index
increased 0.3 percentage points to 61.1 percent in November;
- Consumer Confidence Index
decreased 2.1 points from 111.6 to 109.5 in November;
- ADP reported private
sector employment increased by 534,000 jobs in November.
Later this morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics
will release the Employment Situation for the month of November, the
last employment report to be released in 2021. As we consider
the months ahead and the outlook for the new year, it’s also worth reviewing the
past 12 months to assess the labor market’s recovery from yet
another 100-year storm.
In October of 2020, the unemployment rate stood at
6.9 percent, well below the 14.8 percent recorded in April
of 2020. A year later, that rate has fallen to 4.6
percent. Over the last 12 months, employers added 5.8 million
workers to their payrolls. As of October of 2020, the labor market had
recovered 55 percent of the jobs lost in the spring of 2020 – today
that measure is up to 81 percent. Initial unemployment claims
have fallen back to pre-pandemic levels, and indeed a recent
initial claims report was among the lowest on record.
But all is not well in the labor market. The coronavirus
continues to work its way through the Greek alphabet. While its
effects are receding, – there remain 3.8 million
self-reported Americans who could not work last month due to
the pandemic, while still another 1.3 million Americans are sitting
out of the labor market due to fear over the virus. Indeed, the labor
force has not recovered along with payroll employment. A
complex cocktail of demography, individual circumstance, and policy
choice have left the labor force participation rate flat year
over year.
Fundamentally, however, joblessness no longer dominates the
policy debate. There are no more explicit calls for
stimulus, while the Federal Reserve is increasingly concerned
about its other core mission: price stability.
The sweep of the indicators of late suggest a healthy
employment gain for November, likely in keeping with
recent trends. Indeed, upward revisions to August and
September’s jobs figures suggest the strong pace of hiring in
October may have more of an acceleration of trend than major
upshift. This guesstimator is expecting a payroll
gain of 675,000 jobs, and a decline in the regular unemployment
rate to 4.3 percent. I also am assuming a 15-cent increase
in average hourly earnings, for a 5.1 percent yearly
gain.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment