Statement on the Employment Situation in June
WASHINGTON,
DC – Betsey Stevenson, a member of the Council of Economic Advisers,
issued the following statement today on the employment situation in
June.
The economy added 223,000 jobs in June as the unemployment rate fell to 5.3 percent. Our
economy has now added 5.6 million jobs over the past two years, the
strongest two-year job growth since 2000. But despite this progress,
there is more work to do. We must continue to build on the positive
trends underlying our economy by ensuring that Americans working overtime receive a fair day’s pay, opening new markets for U.S. goods and services through expanded trade, increasing investments in infrastructure, providing relief from the sequester, and raising the minimum wage.
FIVE KEY POINTS ON THE LABOR MARKET IN JUNE 2015
Point 1: The private sector has added 12.8 million jobs over 64 straight months of job growth, extending the longest streak on record. Today
we learned that total nonfarm employment rose by 223,000 in June—and
all those jobs came from the private sector. Although total job growth
was revised down somewhat in April and May, much of the revision is
attributable to lower government employment than previously estimated.
On the whole, our economy has added 2.9 million new jobs over the past
twelve months, near the fifteen-year high achieved in February.
Click on all graphs to enlarge them.
Point 2: The labor force grew more slowly in June than it normally does at this
time of year, reducing the seasonally adjusted labor force participation
rate. June is normally a seasonally strong monthfor
labor force growth, as many new graduates and summer workers enter the
labor force. Over the past sixty years, the labor force has grown by 1.8
percent in June on average before seasonal adjustment—more than three
times faster than May, the next fastest month. But this June, the labor
force only rose 0.4 percent. Accordingly, the labor force contracted on a
seasonally adjusted basis, reducing the labor force participation rate.
One
contributing factor was the timing of the “reference week”—the week for
which households report their labor force status in the Current
Population Survey. Each month, the reference week is the Sunday-to-Saturday period that includes the 12th day of the month. Last month, the 12th was a Friday,
pushing the reference week earlier in the month than normal.
Accordingly, a smaller fraction of June’s labor force gains were likely
captured in this year’s survey than in prior Junes. In fact, since 1955,
June labor force growth has averaged 2.0 percent when the 12th has been a Sunday, Monday, or Tuesday, but only 1.7 percent when the 12th has been a Thursday, Friday, or Saturday. That 0.3 percentage-point gap alone represents nearly 500,000 members of the labor force.
Point 3: Since the recession, both the number of workers who work overtime and
the number of average overtime hours they work have increased. Both
the number of people working more than 40 hours a week and the number
of average hours worked over 40 reached their low in early 2010, but
have since rebounded by 18 and 10 percent respectively, although neither
has returned to its pre-recession average. Growth in both measures was
faster from May 2014 to May 2015 than the annualized average rate over
the previous four years. Both of these factors boost aggregate overtime
worker-hours. This increase in both the number of employees who work
overtime and the number of average overtime hours worked emphasizes the
need to ensure that workers are fairly compensated for the rising
importance of overtime in our economy.
Point 4: The share of workers who are unemployed due to job loss, as opposed to
new entrants searching for a job, has returned to its pre-crisis level. The
distribution of reasons for unemployment shifts with the business
cycle. When overall unemployment is higher, more of the unemployed tend
to have lost their previous jobs. When overall unemployment is lower,
more of the unemployed are labor force entrants, either new or
returning, who have begun job searches. (A third category, the fraction
of unemployed who voluntarily left their jobs, is also cyclical but
accounts for less of the variation.) Over the past year, the fraction of
unemployed persons who lost their jobs returned to its average level
from 2005 and 2006. Notably, the distribution has stabilized over the
past eight months, with the breakdown of unemployed looking much like it
did before the crisis struck. However, the fraction accounted for by
job losses is still above its level from the height of the late 1990s
expansion.
Point 5: The
distribution of job growth across industries generally followed recent
trends in June, but some industries saw especially weak or strong
months. June
was an especially strong month for financial activities (+20,000),
retail trade (+33,000), temporary help (+20,000), information (+7,000),
and other services (+10,000). June was a weaker than usual month in
construction (unchanged), wholesale trade (unchanged), utilities
(unchanged), manufacturing (+4,000), and leisure and hospitality
(+22,000). Across the 17 industries shown below, the correlation between
the most recent one-month percent change and the average percent change
over the last twelve months fell to 0.80 from 0.90 last month,
remaining well above the average correlation in previous months.
As
the Administration stresses every month, the monthly employment and
unemployment figures can be volatile, and payroll employment estimates
can be subject to substantial revision. Therefore, it is important not
to read too much into any one monthly report and it is informative to
consider each report in the context of other data as they become
available.
Source: The White House Press Office
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