Ben Casselman Profile picture
Oct 2, 2020 15 tweets 7 min read Read on X
Jobs day charts thread! (Will be adding gradually because I'm writing the main story today, which you can find here: nytimes.com/2020/10/02/bus…)
Even after the recent gains, we still have nearly 11 million fewer jobs than before the pandemic, and progress is slowing. By comparison, we lost 8.7 million jobs in the Great Recession. Image
The worst news in this report: The number of people reporting they have lost their jobs permanently (as opposed to being on temporary layoff/furlough) rose again. Evidence of mounting long-run damage to the economy.
nytimes.com/live/2020/10/0… Image
Back in April, nearly 80% of unemployed workers said they were only temporarily out of work. Now it's less than 40%. Image
To be clear, that's partly the result of rising permanent job losses, but it's *mostly* the result of furloughed employees being called back to work. Number of people on temporary layoff has fallen dramatically. Image
Measures of permanent or "core" (per @JedKolko definition) unemployment are rising, but are still nowhere close to as bad in the Great Recession. Image
The "misclassification" issue, in which people who should be counted as unemployed are instead counted as employed but absent, is still around, but shrinking. Unemployment rate would have been about four tenths of a point higher without the issue. Image
The leisure & hospitality sector added 300k jobs in September, but remains 3.8 million in the hole relative to February. And notable that it actually lost jobs on a non-seasonally adjusted basis -- this is usually a month when hotels cut jobs, so a small loss shows up as a gain. Image
The only major sector to *lose* jobs in September was government, which cut 200k+. That's partly the result of the end of temporary census jobs (-40k). But it mostly reflects big cuts to local school districts. Image
(Though for consistency's sake, I should note that local education actually added jobs on a not seasonally adjusted basis. It's just a much smaller gain than in most years.) Image
The "goods" side of the economy has held up much better than services. But construction and manufacturing aren't exactly going gangbusters -- certainly not enough to offset the struggles of the service side of the economy. ImageImage
The employment rate ticked up in September, but it's barely halfway back to where it was before the pandemic, and it's still way below the worst of the last recession.
And among prime-age workers (25-54), the employment rate actually fell. ImageImage
The drop in prime-age employment was entirely among women, who are bearing the brunt of school closures. See @jeannasmialek's more detailed discussion of this here:
nytimes.com/live/2020/10/0… Image
Long-term unemployment -- the great scourge of the last recession -- is rising again. Already, 2.4 million Americans have been out of work for more than six months, and that's only the beginning.
nytimes.com/live/2020/10/0… Image
The slowdown shows up clearly in the gross flows data. The number of unemployed people getting jobs fell. The number of employed people losing jobs rose. (Note this is true regardless of whether you focus on official unemployment or include flows into/out of the labor force.) Image

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More from @bencasselman

Nov 4
So this was an interesting finding from @NateSilver538, but one I found odd because @BLS_gov publishes CPI for regions (and for some metro areas) but not for states. So I dug into it a bit, and there's less here than meets the eye.
Nate's data is coming from this tracker from the @JECRepublicans. They don't have a state-level inflation estimate either, though. They just use BLS's estimate of regional inflation and apply it to an estimate of household spending when Biden took office.
jec.senate.gov/public/index.c…
You can see this if you hover over their map (or download their data). States in the same region all have the same cumulative rates of inflation. But they differ in the amount of inflation experienced in dollar terms because some states have higher avg household incomes.
Read 14 tweets
Aug 28
I hate that @ellawinthrop is leaving us, but I'm so glad I got to work with her on her last piece for @nytimesbusiness. She's the best, most collaborative, most creative visual journalist I've ever worked with. A thread with a few of my favorite Ben-and-Ella collabs:
1. This iconic chart showing the scale of the pandemic job losses:
nytimes.com/interactive/20…
2. This piece digging deep into the American Time Use Survey to look at how the pandemic changed our lives:
nytimes.com/interactive/20…
Read 6 tweets
Jul 11
Good news on inflation! U.S. consumer prices FELL 0.1 percent in June, and were up just 3 percent from a year earlier. "Core" prices, stripping out volatile food and fuel, were up 0.1 percent from May and 3.3 percent from last June. Data: …Live coverage: bls.gov/news.release/c…
nytimes.com/live/2024/07/1…
This is the second straight month where there has been effectively no inflation on a month-to-month basis. Prices were flat in May, and down in June.
If you take a longer view here: At 3% year-over-year, inflation is no longer outside historical norms (though it is still higher than immediately prepandemic). And over the past three months, rents have risen at an annual rate of ***just 1.1%.***
Image
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Read 7 tweets
Jul 2
Job openings ticked up in May (but only because April was revised down). Layoffs edged up. Quits basically flat. All consistent with a gradually slowing, but not collapsing, job market. #JOLTS
Full data: bls.gov/news.release/j…
There were 8.1 million job openings on the last day of May. That's up from 7.9 million in April, revised down from the 8.1m originally reported.
Larger story here is that openings are clearly falling quickly, even if they're still high in absolute terms. #JOLTS Image
There were 1.2 job openings for every unemployed worker in May. That's more or less where things stood immediately before the pandemic (when the labor market was widely viewed as strong but not overheated). Image
Read 7 tweets
Jan 25
The U.S. economy slowed in the final three months of the year, but only because the Q3 number was so strong -- the 3.3% growth rate in Q4 was well above expectations and certainly offered no hints of a brewing recession. (Belated charts thread)
Image
This is not a case where the volatile components of G.D.P. made a weak quarter look strong, as sometimes happens. Measures of underlying demand were also very strong.
Image
Image
For all the predictions of a recession, G.D.P. growth actually *accelerated* in 2023, and topped the prepandemic average growth rate as well. Image
Read 4 tweets
Jan 3
Job openings, quits and layoffs all edged down slightly in November. Consistent with a gradually cooling labor market, but definitely no sign things are falling off a cliff. #JOLTS
Data: bls.gov/news.release/j…
There were 8.8 million job openings on the last day of November. That's down a touch from October, but only because October was revised up. Big picture: Openings are trending down (and quite quickly, at that), but are still high by historical standards. #JOLTS Image
The number of job openings per unemployed worker actually ticked up in November (because unemployment fell), but ignore the noise. The labor market is becoming more balanced, though the ratio is (again) high relative to the prepandemic period. Image
Read 9 tweets

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