It leaves us 8.3 million jobs below the pre-pandemic trend.
Job growth had looked a lot slower over the last couple of months but these upward revisions change the picture a bit. According to estimates now, has been more steady.
This is average monthly job growth over recent windows.
Unemployment rate down 0.2 percentage points (pp). Good news.
Really excellent news is that the number of long-term unemployed fell by 15%, down 356K to 2.326 million.
In many recoveries, the long-term unemployed struggle to re-attach but this is excellent progress.
The labor force participation rate was unchanged at 61.6%, remained in a narrow range of 61.4-61.7% since June 2020.
The employment-population ratio (EPOP) was up 0.1 pp over the month to 58.8%, but BLS says little changed. Likely up due to close rounding.
So looks like unemployment down for good reasons as unemployed jobseekers find work.
The share of prime-age adults employed is a key measure of core labor market strength, that omits younger & older people on the markets' margins.
It accelerated up 0.3 pp, after being stalled last month.
We're back to early 2017 levels.
From CDC, 65% of working-age Americans who are at least 2 weeks past their final COVID-19 vaccination dose today, so 35% aren't.
Progress on working-age vaccinations has accelerated slightly, now 0.7 pp of working age population each week. At that rate, 80% vaxd in 5 months.
The share of American adults employed among those without a high school degree is down 1.8 pp below pre-pandemic.
For those with a high school degree and no college, it's still down 4.3 pp.
Black & Hispanic women's employment remain the farthest off pre-pandemic levels, with Black and Hispanic men next.
Little gender gap among white Americans.
Little gap remaining for Asian Americans.
That’s the extensive quantity (Q) margin. Intensive Q margin is average hours.
Average workweek hours for private sector ticks down 0.1 to 34.7 hours.
In pandemic, employers worked staff longer hours as alternative to hiring more people.
Hours up this recession, unlike GR.
The number of Americans stuck in a part time job but wanting full time fell in October & is almost down to pre-pandemic levels.
My suspicion is that employers would rather raise hours & pay some OT than raise base compensation, as would be needed to attract new hires & retain.
3.6 million more Americans are out of the labor force & not wanting a job now versus 2 years ago.
3.3m rise in older Americans (55+) in this group accounts for 91% of rise.
# of young folks in the group actually down 299K.
Early retirements, COVID concern, grandkid care...
In sum:
Labor market recovery stronger over last 3 months than we had understood,
A long way to go to a fully-healthy, full-employment labor market. Easy gains gone.
Pandemic accelerated older Americans exit to sidelines. Better jobs & pub health necessary to pull people back.
Context: profits are up more than wages.
The virus makes many jobs worse.
Many companies can improve jobs & are doing so quickly.
Others can't or won't do so fast enough.
People will continue to move towards those who do.
Americans not working mainly because "I was caring for someone or sick myself with coronavirus symptoms" ⬆️ more than 2X from 2.0 million in late July to 4.7M in early Sept.
Offsetting this, “I was caring for children not in school or daycare” ⬇️ from 7.1 to 4.4M.
“I was laid off or furloughed due to coronavirus pandemic” had been ⬇️steadily but stopped doing so.
“I was concerned about getting or spreading the coronavirus” pretty stable.
Here are all the main reasons for not working with the counts for the wave ending 9/13.
It's not clear if changes reflect new people not employed or the same people with changing main reasons.
For people with multiple constraints, if one eases (kid care), another may become be reported as the "main reason."
Also, some change in survey design starting with 8/2.
This applies to teachers too, and with special force for those teaching kids age 5-11, who are both legally compelled to be in school & legally barred from being vaccinated.
Coverage of the House passage of the reconciliation bill is terribly process oriented.
It's really hard to learn what's in bill & how it would affect Americans' lives. nyti.ms/3zfieTv
If the newspapers are reluctant to make their own independent characterizations, at least quote some pols, some think tankers, some interest group representatives, some Americans in diners...
Truly, I want to know. What is this bill promising to do & how, with what chance of success? What the heck are these programs?! congress.gov/committee-prin…