WASHINGTON,
DC – Jason Furman, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, issued
the following statement today on the employment situation in August.
Our economy has now added
8.0 million jobs over the past three years, a pace that has not been
exceeded since 2000. And while the economy added jobs at a somewhat
slower pace in August than in recent months, the unemployment rate fell
to 5.1 percent—its lowest level since April 2008—and the labor force
participation rate remained stable. Our businesses have now added 13.1
million jobs over 66 straight months, extending the longest streak on
record. In addition, hourly earnings for American workers continued to
rise. But there’s more work to do to ensure that America’s domestic
momentum can continue to offset some of the headwinds from the global
economy. That starts with avoiding self-inflicted wounds: Congress needs
to pass a budget that reverses the sequester and avoids shutting down
the government. But it’s also why the President is committed to pushing
Congress to increase investments in infrastructure as part of a
long-term transportation reauthorization, open new markets with expanded
trade, and raise the minimum wage.
FIVE KEY POINTS ON THE LABOR MARKET IN AUGUST 2015
1. The private sector has added 13.1 million jobs over 66 straight months of job growth, extending the longest streak on record. Today
we learned that private-sector employment rose by 140,000 in August,
below the recent pace. Despite the monthly volatility in employment
growth, long-term trends remain strong. The unemployment rate declined
to 5.1 percent, its lowest level since early 2008, while the labor force
participation rate remained stable. Wages continued to rise, with
average hourly earnings for all private-sector workers up 2.2 percent
over the past year.
(Click on graphs to increase their size.)
2. Over the past twelve
months, rising real hourly earnings accounted for close to 40 percent of
the increase in real aggregate weekly earnings. Aggregate weekly
earnings are the total wages and salaries paid to all private employees
on nonfarm payrolls. Changes in aggregate earnings can be driven by
contributions from employment, from the length of the average workweek,
and from average hourly earnings. The large contribution of rising
hourly earnings is a recent trend. Aggregate earnings reached a cyclical
trough in December 2009, and over the following year-and-a-half, real
hourly wages declined. The aggregate earnings increase during that early
period was more than accounted for by a combination of rising
employment and a longer workweek. Over the next three years, both hourly
earnings and the workweek were largely stable, with rising employment
accounting for more than 80 percent of the growth in aggregate earnings.
Real wage growth over the past year has been a major contributor to the
speed-up in aggregate earnings, due to both rising nominal wages and
slowing consumer price growth as oil prices have declined.
3. Across most
industries, real weekly earnings for production and nonsupervisory
workers have grown at a faster pace during this business cycle than the
previous cycle. Real weekly earnings have grown faster since
2008—including both recession and recovery—than during the previous
recession and recovery. Wage gains relative to the previous business
cycle have been especially pronounced in the transportation, wholesale
trade, retail trade, financial activities, and other services sectors,
while mining & logging, education & health services, and leisure
& hospitality are the only sectors to have underperformed. Relative
employment trends are more diffuse, with some industries growing at a
slower pace during this cycle (such as financial activities and
construction, which grew quickly during the 2000s). Notably,
manufacturing contracted during the 2000s but has since reversed that
trend and outpaced the previous business cycle.
4. Summer seasonal
fluctuations in auto manufacturing employment have moderated during this
recovery as demand for autos continues to grow. Historically, large
auto manufacturers tended to shed jobs in July and recoup many of them
in August, as manufacturing plants typically shut down temporarily in
July. But over this recovery, auto manufacturers have reduced these
seasonal fluctuations. During the previous business cycle, July losses
tended to exceed August gains, with auto manufacturing losing jobs on
balance over the summer. But since the financial crisis, July losses and
August gains have tended to balance one another. The summer turnover
has decreased against a backdrop of continued strong growth in auto
sales. Indeed, 2015 is on pace to be the strongest year for car and
truck sales since 2001. Overall, the auto industry has added over
600,000 new jobs since Chrysler and General Motors emerged from
bankruptcy in mid-2009—including solid growth in both the manufacturing
and retail sectors.
5. The distribution of
job growth across industries in August generally followed recent trends,
with this month’s slower growth affecting a number of industries. Despite
the overall slower pace of job growth, above-average gains relative to
the past year were seen in State and local government (+31,000),
financial activities (+19,000), utilities (+2,000), Federal government
(+2,000), and health care and social assistance (+56,000). August was an
especially weak month in manufacturing (-17,000), information services
(-7,000), professional and business services (+22,000, excluding
temporary help), and other services (-4,000). 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 rose
to 0.92 from 0.68 last month, well above the average correlation over
the past two years.
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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