Jason Furman
WASHINGTON,
DC – Jason Furman, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, issued
the following statement today on the employment situation in October.
Note: Click on the graphs to increase their size.
Summary: The economy added 271,000 jobs in October, marking the strongest three years of job creation since 2000.
In October, the economy added jobs at the fastest pace so far this year as the unemployment rate declined to its lowest level since April 2008 and broader labor market indicators improved further. Wage growth picked up in October and wages have grown faster over the past twelve months than any other point in this recovery. Nevertheless, we need to take steps to contribute to further job creation and a faster pace of wage growth. Last week’s bipartisan budget agreement will take an important step toward making long-term investments that will add jobs and boost wages. But there is more work to do to extend these positive trends, including increasing investments in infrastructure, implementing high-standards free trade agreements like the Trans-Pacific Partnership, and raising the minimum wage.
FIVE KEY POINTS ON THE LABOR MARKET IN OCTOBER 2015
1. Today we learned that private-sector employment rose by 268,000 jobs in October.
Our businesses have now added 13.5 million jobs over 68 straight
months, extending the longest streak on record. The unemployment rate
ticked down to 5.0 percent in October—its lowest level since April
2008—with stable labor force participation. Wages continued to rise;
average hourly earnings for all private employees have now risen 2.5
percent over the past year, the fastest pace achieved since 2009.
Moreover, broader labor market indicators improved as the
“underemployment” (U-6) rate declined to its lowest level since May 2008
amid a substantial decline in part-time work for economic reasons.
Private employment growth in August and September was also revised up by
a total of 56,000 jobs. Overall, our economy has created 8.0 million
jobs over the past thirty-six months, the fastest pace since 2000.
2. To keep the unemployment rate stable, the economy needs to add 77,000 jobs per month.
As an aging population places downward pressure on the labor force
participation rate, the economy needs to generate fewer jobs than in the
past to keep the unemployment rate constant. CEA estimates the
breakeven rate of employment growth—the rate needed to maintain a
constant unemployment rate over the next year given a labor force
participation rate in line with demographic trends—at 77,000 payroll
jobs per month. (The exact number can vary substantially from month to
month depending on measurement discrepancies in the separate surveys
used to measurement unemployment and payroll job creation.) This
breakeven rate is broadly comparable to estimates from the Congressional
Budget Office and Goldman Sachs.When
the economy adds jobs faster than the breakeven rate, that is
consistent with a declining unemployment rate and/or a cyclical rebound
in participation. Over the past three years, the economy has added an
average of 223,000 jobs per month and the unemployment rate has declined
by 2.8 percentage points. There is still more room for the labor market
to improve—especially with faster wage growth. But as the unemployment
rate gets closer to normalizing, the pace of job growth would be
expected to start normalizing as well—consistent with the pattern in
past business cycles.
3. Long-term unemployment has fallen rapidly over the past year but remains somewhat above its pre-recession average.The overall unemployment rate has declined 0.7 percentage point since last October, and about 70 percent of this decline is due to falling long-term unemployment. This is a disproportionately large share given that about one quarter of the jobless are long-term unemployed. After rising to an all-time high of 4.4 percent in April 2010, the long-term unemployment rate has been cut by more than two thirds to 1.4 percent in October,an important sign of the progress that is being made. Nevertheless, because the long-term unemployment rate more than quadrupled as a result of the recession, the declines seen recently are not yet sufficient to return long-term unemployment to pre-recession levels. Indeed, the return of the overall unemployment rate to pre-recession levels reflects the offsetting effects of higher long-term unemployment and lower short-term unemployment.
4. Broader
indicators such as long-term unemployment and the number of workers
employed part-time for economic reasons have grown increasingly
sensitive to business cycles over recent decades. In the Great
Recession, 56 percent of the increase in unemployment was in the form of
long-term unemployment. Part-time work for economic reasons increased
by 62 percent of the increase in the overall unemployment rate,
indicating a broad deterioration in the labor market above and beyond
what was captured by the headline unemployment rate. The cyclical
response of each of these indicators in this recession has become larger
for a given percentage-point increase in the unemployment rate over
recent decades. There has been substantial recovery in these broader
labor market measures, but the outsized deterioration in the Great
Recession is still not fully healed.
5.
The distribution of job growth across industries in October generally
followed recent trends, with this month’s faster growth most apparent in
services industries while manufacturing continued to face global
headwinds. Above-average
gains relative to the past year were seen in industries such as retail
trade (+44,000) and construction (+31,000). At the same time,
manufacturing employment—which is facing headwinds from global growth
affecting exports—was flat. Mining and logging employment, which
includes oil extraction, continued to decline (-4,000) as low oil prices
have slowed investment. 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 declined to 0.73 from
a peak of 0.96 last month, remaining in line with 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, Office of the Press Secretary
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