Daniel Zhao Profile picture
Jul 8, 2022 12 tweets 7 min read Read on X
June's #JobsReport shows the job market holding steady despite recession fears. Job gains slowed modestly to 372,000, beating expectations, and unemployment held flat at 3.6% for the 4th month in a row.

This is still a hot labor market even if the broader economy is cooling.

1/
Job gains cooled only modestly in June, beating expectations. Job gains overall seem to have shifted into a lower gear in the last few months, but recall that in 2019's hot job market, monthly job gains averaged 164k. This is still a healthy clip.

#jobsreport 2/
Most industries added jobs in June in broad-based gains across the board. A few industry stories:
1. Despite concerns about rotation from goods to services, job gains returned in #retail (+15.4k) and held strong in leisure & hospitality (+67k)

#jobsreport 3/
2. Despite the housing market slowdown, job gains in related industries were maybe muted, but we didn't see large job losses:

Construction: +6k
Real estate: +3.7k

#jobsreport 4/
3. Despite reports of prominent layoffs, #tech industries saw job gains in June:

Information: +25k
Computer systems design and related services: +10k

#jobsreport 5/
With the steady progress in June, payrolls are within striking distance of pre-pandemic levels, just over half a million away. Despite slowdown fears, that milestone is still within reach if we get another 2 months of solid jobs growth.

#jobsreport 6/
Wage growth is cooling:
Average hourly earnings growth slowed to 5.1 percent year-over-year. Wage growth has slowed even more in recent months, growing at just a 4.2% annualized pace over the last quarter and a 3.8% annualized pace in June.

#jobsreport 7/
The unemployment rate was flat at 3.6 percent in June, for the fourth month in a row. The picture in June, however, is different from recent months bc of the backdrop of falling labor force participation in June...

#jobsreport 8/
The labor force participation rate ticked down to 62.2 percent from 62.3 percent, and that picture looks even worse for prime-age (25–54) workers where the participation rate dropped 0.3 pp, reversing 3 months of gains.

#jobsreport 9/
The drop in labor force participation was in large part driven by a decline for Black workers who saw labor force participation fall back after jumping in May. The Black unemployment rate did drop, but you don't want to see that happening w/ falling LFP

#jobsreport 10/
Workers who are part-time for economic reasons dropped by 707,000, meaning many part-time workers who want full-time work are finding it bc of the strong labor market.

As a share of total employment (right), this is the lowest level on record.

#jobsreport 11/
Overall, today's #jobsreport reiterates that the labor market is a bright spot in the recovery. The drop in LFP was a blemish, but so far, recession fears have not yet materialized in the labor market.

12/12

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More from @DanielBZhao

Mar 4
Another drop for the @Glassdoor Employee Confidence Index in Feb, falling to 45.1%, down from 45.7% last month & 50.7% in Feb 2023, as recent layoffs in the headlines continue to drive anxiety among employees.

1/ Image
Discussions of layoffs in @Glassdoor reviews have skyrocketed over the last 2 yrs in tech & media. In tech, they're actually higher than even the worst of Covid.

Despite measured layoffs remaining low by historical standards, anxiety about layoffs remains high.

2/ Image
One partial explanation is that sentiment from current employees who mention layoffs in reviews (likely employees who survived a layoff) has seen a sharper drop than other groups as burnout & morale appear to be worsening.

3/ Image
Read 5 tweets
Feb 2
First #jobsreport of 2024! Wow, some surprisingly hot figures on the headline:
-Payroll growth beats at 353k
-Unemp at 3.7%
-Avg hourly earnings up to 4.5%

Lots of details to look at below the headlines

1/
(Sorry for delay, took some time to digest data)

Payrolls grew 353,000 in Jan, well past expectations. Dec & Jan both were much stronger than originally reported, though new seasonal trends around turn of year means the true underlying growth rate is probably a touch lower.

2/ Image
Payroll growth over 2023 came in at 3.1 million jobs added, lower than the recent Covid recovery years but faster than the pre-Covid years & comparable to 2014–2015.

The annual revisions reaffirm the strength of the job market in 2023

3/ Image
Read 12 tweets
Jan 5
Last #jobsreport of 2023 is solid though a mixed bag under the hood:
-Payrolls beat with 216,000 jobs added
-Unemployment flat at 3.7%, though with a tick down in LFP
-Avg hourly earnings ticks up to 4.1%

Charts to follow 1/
216,000 jobs added to payrolls in December is a solid number, right about average for 2023.

Over 2023, there were 2.7 million jobs added to payrolls, down from 2021–2 when there were more "reopening jobs" coming back but still the highest pre-pandemic jobs growth since 2015

2/
Image
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Jobs growth in December was driven in large part by private education & health services (+74k) and government (+52k). Health care, education and government together accounted for almost 4 in 5 jobs created in H2 2023, a higher share than in the past few years.

3/
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Image
Read 5 tweets
May 5, 2023
Job market defying gravity in April:

*253,000 jobs added, above expectations though big negative revisions to last 2 months
*Unemp drops to 3.4%. Black unemp at record low 4.7%
*Wage growth jumps to 4.4% YoY

There's still heat in the job market #JobsReport 1/
Employers added 253,000 jobs, a slower pace than much of 2022, but Feb & Mar were downwardly revised by 149,000. Post-revisions, the start of the year was much slower than originally reported, but job gains remain healthy.

#JobsReport 2/ Image
The unemployment rate ticked back down to 3.4%, tying the recovery low. Ties the pre-pandemic low from 2019 and before that, we hadn't seen that low level since 1969.

#JobsReport 3/ Image
Read 5 tweets
May 2, 2023
Job openings fell to 9,590,000 in March, down from 9,974,000 in Feb and the lowest since Apr 2021.

Falling job openings adds another data point in favor of a cooling job market.

#JOLTS 1/ Image
Job openings fell most sharply in some of the service sectors that have driven much of the recent jobs recovery:

Transportation, warehousing & utilities: -144,000
Professional & business services: -135,000
Retail trade: -84,000
Health care & social assistance: -71,000

#JOLTS 2/ Image
The most concerning figure from the #JOLTS report is the jump in layoffs & discharges, rising to 1,805,000 in March, near the pre-pandemic level after spending much of the last 2 years well below, amidst a historically hot job market.

3/ Image
Read 8 tweets
Apr 29, 2023
Very excited to be listening to Odd Lots live at #EconTwitterIRL Image
Like the discussion of competing on science vs execution vs China. US can compete on advanced science but less so on manufacturing at low cost. China executes best where science is mature. Clean tech is an important case where US is still playing catch-up

#EconTwitterIRL
And Dan Wang's impression is that China regards AI similarly to social media where it's a technology to control rather than an opportunity for productivity growth. Evidently Twitter doesn't improve productivity

#EconTwitterIRL
Read 6 tweets

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