WASHINGTON,
DC – Jason Furman, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, issued
the following statement today on the employment situation in September.
The economy added 142,000 jobs in September, extending the longest streak of private-sector job growth on record.
The
economy added jobs in September at a pace below that seen earlier in
the year, as slowing growth abroad and global financial turmoil have
weighed on economic activity. Overall, however, the unemployment rate
remains at its lowest level since early 2008 and the private sector has
added 13.2 million jobs over 67 straight months of job growth—the
longest streak on record. Given the increased uncertainty around the
world, it is imperative that the United States not further exacerbate
that uncertainty with unnecessary brinksmanship and austerity. Instead,
we must take steps to continue the domestic momentum that the U.S.
economy has enjoyed in the last several years. That includes passing a
budget that reverses the sequester and makes critical investments that
help our economy continue to grow, reauthorizing the Ex-Im Bank so that
our businesses can compete on a level-playing field abroad, and
increasing investments in infrastructure.
1. Today we learned that private-sector employment rose by 118,000 in September, below the pace observed earlier in the year. However, September was the 67th
straight month of private sector job growth, extending the longest
streak on record. The unemployment rate held steady at 5.1 percent, its
lowest level since early 2008, while the labor force participation rate
decreased. Wages were largely unchanged over the month, with nominal
average hourly earnings for all private-sector workers up 2.2 percent
over the past year. Payroll employment growth in July and August were
revised downward.
(Click on the graphs to increase their size.)
2. The underemployment rate declined 0.3 percentage point to 10.0 percent in September, its lowest level since May 2008. While
the headline unemployment rate (U-3) measures only unemployed persons,
the underemployment rate (U-6) also includes those who are “marginally
attached” to the labor force but not actively looking for a job, and
those employed part-time who would prefer to work full-time. Although
the headline unemployment rate was unchanged in September, the
underemployment rate fell 0.3 percentage point as the share of the labor
force working part-time for economic reasons fell from 4.1 percent to
3.9 percent. Over the last year, the underemployment rate declined 1.7
percentage points, compared with a 0.8 percentage point decline for the
official unemployment rate. Despite this recent progress, part-time
employment for economic reasons remains elevated, and the
underemployment rate has not fully returned to its pre-crisis average.
3. The
rise in employment since early 2010 is more than fully accounted for by
the increase in full-time employment, with part-time employment holding
steady. The
economy has added 11 million full-time jobs since February 2010,
according to a separate survey of households that measures full-time and
part-time status. Part-time employment has fallen slightly over this
period. While 75 percent of part-time workers do so for family, health,
and other reasons, the fraction of the labor force working part-time for
economic reasons declined in September. This shift drove the reduction
in the underemployment rate to its lowest level since May 2008.
4. Manufacturing job growth has been stronger in this recovery than in previous expansions. American
manufacturers have created 865,000 jobs since February 2010, including
net gains in 2015 despite decreases during the last two months. This
recovery from the depths of the recession is especially notable when
compared with previous business cycles. In fact, manufacturing
employment declined over the decade leading up to the financial crisis,
even during the 2001-2007 economic expansion. Manufacturing employment
fell 12.5 percent over that period, despite the 18.0 percent increase in
gross domestic product. The trend has reversed in this recovery, with
manufacturing employment currently 5.6 percent above its level when the
recession ended in 2009. The 1991-2001 expansion did see manufacturing
employment growth, but at a considerably slower pace—at the
corresponding point in that expansion, manufacturing employment was only
1.7 percent higher than the business cycle trough. Notwithstanding the
outsized progress in this expansion compared with previous expansions,
manufacturing has not yet fully recovered the losses in incurred during
the Great Recession.
5. The
distribution of job growth across industries in September generally
followed recent trends, with this month’s slower growth affecting a
number of industries. Despite
the overall pace of job growth, above-average gains relative to the
past year were seen in information services (+12,000) and State and
local government (+26,000). September was an especially weak month in
wholesale trade (-4,000), utilities (-1,000), and financial activities
(unchanged). 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 remained essentially unchanged at
0.94.
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, Office of the Press Secretary
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