Private-sector employment rebounded fantastically following the pandemic recession because Congress made fiscal investments at the scale of the problem, and employment in the private sector exceeded pre-pandemic levels by July 2022. cnn.com/2022/03/03/per…
While the recovery continues to chug along, with rising labor force participation and prime-age employment-to-population ratio approaching pre-pandemic levels, the one sector that has failed to recover and has actually stalled for much of this year . . .
. . . public sector employment.
Let's start with what happened in the private sector. There was a dramatic fall and a subsequent strong and swift rebound. This bounce back is especially notable in comparison to the prolonged, austerity-starved recovery from the Great Recession.
Private-sector employment is now 0.7% above pre-pandemic levels, while public-sector employment at the state and local level remains 3.2% below its February 2020 level, though it experienced far fewer losses than the private sector in the early months of the pandemic.
Public-sector employment also suffered in the aftermath of the Great Recession, but for many of the same reasons private-sector jobs faltered—the rise in austerity policies at all levels of govt choked off the recovery. State and local public employment didn't recover until 2018!
In both this and the last recovery, public-sector employment has faltered, but for very different reasons.
In the prior recovery, the public sector was ground-zero of the austerity that restricted the private sector recovery with the removal of fiscal relief and budget cuts.
In the current recovery, federal fiscal relief under the American Rescue Plan has been extraordinarily strong, and state and local governments’ revenues have held up much better, yet public-sector employment still faltered.
JOLTS data shows a very different pattern following the Great Recession vs the current recovery. Job openings plummeted and hires decreased in the aftermath of the GR: the public sector wasn’t interested in boosting employment. Quits also faltered due to lack of opportunities.
A very different picture emerged this time:
Rising job openings signify increased demand, and though we saw hiring pick up in the last year, the hiring “yield” (hires/openings) fell quickly and employment barely budged. Further, quits have risen to historically high levels.
Job openings in the public sector are up but workers aren’t accepting jobs at the going wages. Quits are at historically high rates: labor market exits or switches to the private sector.
Shortages beget shortages as workplaces are short staffed and workers experience burnout.
In the private sector, shortages can be remedied relatively quickly through faster wage growth driven by market competition for workers—as happened in 2021 and earlier this year in rapidly expanding sectors like leisure and hospitality.
Wages in the public sector are directly driven by policy decisions, not market forces. State and local governments have to affirmatively act—by making jobs more attractive—to alleviate shortages. And, workers can increase their leverage by forming a union. epi.org/blog/the-publi…
Improved job quality in the public sector will translate into staffing for the vital services the public sector provides from health care to transit to public education. I hope to finally see some improvement in public-sector employment in the latest #jobsreport out tomorrow!
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Payroll employment increased by 206,000 in June, with notable downward revisions in the prior two months. Employment growth is expected to slow as the labor market approaches full employment. The Federal Reserve should get a clear message that we are not in a hot labor market.
The slight uptick in the unemployment rate to 4.1% in June—ending a 30-month streak of at or below 4.0% unemployment—was largely due to an increase in labor force participation, as more workers sought jobs. Employment increased as the employment-to-population rate held steady.
June's gain of 206,000 jobs is on par with the average gain over the prior 12 months. There were notable increases in health care and social assistance as well as in public sector employment, primarily at the state and local level.
Poverty increased sharply in 2022 due to safety net cutbacks and inflation. Official poverty measurement misses the valuable tax credits and other assistance provided in the wake of the pandemic. Likewise it also misses the huge uptick in poverty when they were allowed to expire.
Comprehensive measures of poverty—specifically those based on the Supplemental Poverty Measures—showed very sharp increases. The unfortunate headline from today's report is that child poverty more than doubled between 2021 and 2022, rising from 5.2% to 12.4%.
The spike in child poverty was severe, erasing nearly all of the gains made from the valuable pandemic safety net measures, notably the expanded child tax credit. The spike was most striking for Black and Hispanic children, hitting 17.8% and 19.5%, respectively.
Today’s Census Bureau data on income, poverty, and health insurance in 2022 confirmed many of the predictions made in our preview last week. epi.org/blog/2022-cens…
Median household income fell 2.3% as the inflationary shock of 2022 overwhelmed the benefits of a strong labor market (more hours worked and relatively fast nominal wage growth).
Labor market story is strong overall for May with some notable survey divergence:
Payroll data solid
- payroll employment increased a healthy 339k
- nominal wage growth continues to decelerate
Household data mixed
- rise in unemployment (+.9pp Black unemp)
- drop in employment
The job report for May shows notable employment gains in education and health services, professional and business services, government, and leisure and hospitality in May.
Gains in both leisure and hospitality and government employment are particularly welcome news as they remain the sectors with the largest job shortfalls since before the pandemic. Those deficits are steadily shrinking month after month.
Job openings edged up in April 2023, but remain close to their level two years ago (in April 2021) and significantly lower than in the height of labor market churn in the pandemic recovery. Layoffs and discharges decreased in April while hires held steady and quits softened.
Job openings have generally been decreasing over the last year, slowly but steadily moving closer to their pre-pandemic levels, though clearly not there yet. Much of the elevated rates we've seen may have been because of the increased labor market churn and not net new demand.
After increasing in March, layoffs dropped in April closer to its February level. Hires held steady in April, while quits continued to edge down.
Layoffs still remain significantly lower than their prepandemic levels while hires and quits are still elevated.
The labor market continues strong in February 2023, payroll jobs up 311,000. Prime-age EPOPs back to pre-pandemic levels. Unemployment rate up along with labor force participation.
After increasing 504,000 in January, payroll employment increased by 311,000 in February. The most jobs added were in the leisure and hospitality sector, up 105,000, while jobs were lost in the information sector, down 25,000.
The gains in leisure and hospitality continue to chip away at the leisure and hospitality shortfall since millions of jobs were lost in the pandemic. Leisure and hospitality is now down 410,000 jobs since February 2020.