For convenience, here's all the info on the Mar jobs report in a single thread - sorry to be the bearer of bad news, especially regarding American citizens losing so much ground in this economy...
The headline numbers once again look good w/ over 300k payrolls added and the employment number from the household survey rising even faster, but what kinds of jobs are being created? Turns out they're all part-time:
And this isn't new - it's a continuation of a long trend: full-time employment is lower today than Feb '23 w/ all of the net job creation since then being part-time work:
Why the surge in part-time employment? Many Americans have been laid off and replaced 1 full-time job w/ 2 or 3 part-time ones; people are also picking up additional jobs to make ends meet in a cost-of-living crisis; this has caused an unprecedented divergence between the household and establishment surveys, since the latter double counts individuals w/ multiple jobs while the former survey shows a net loss of jobs since Aug '23:
Number of people w/ multiple jobs jumped again in Mar but remember that this figure only increases when someone gets a 2nd job; if you're already working 2 gigs and pick up a 3rd, you're not counted again - at least not here; but you ARE counted again in the nonfarm payrolls...
W/ the shift to so much part-time work, average hours worked per week has trended down for over almost 3 years and is below the pre-pandemic average; your hourly wage raise doesn't do much good when it's combined w/ a cut in your hours:
Another disturbing datum point: too many jobs are in gov't; the economy isn't adding enough private-sector jobs to support number of workers gov't is hiring; Mar's ratio was about 3:1, nowhere near sustainable, especially since those private-sector jobs were all part-time, generating less tax revenue than average full-time job:
Let's break down the annual change in private sector for a closer look: we find the fastest growing sector was health care, which is dominated by gov't; most of the hiring over the last year came directly or indirectly from gov't - even the construction jobs were mostly financed w/ gov't guaranteed loans on projects that aren't profitable (which is why the private sector wasn't undertaking those projects)...
We'd rather see good-paying blue-collar manufacturing jobs taking the lead, but that sector has been anemic: employment is up a mere 0.1% since Jan '23, having added zero jobs in Mar '24:
And while it's good to see the labor force participation rate climb, we're still way below the pre-pandemic rate, and that's hiding the true level of unemployment by excluding millions of workers from the calculation:
You can see that the labor force is clearly below its pre-pandemic trend:
And we see the same thing w/ the employment-to-population ratio:
As well as the number of nonfarm payrolls from the establishment survey:
And yet again in the employment level from the household survey: millions below the trend:
The Bureau of Labor Statistics even has a category of people called "not in labor force" and it's about 5 million above the pre-pandemic level, and waaay above the pre-pandemic trend which had begun trending down in about Set '18:
So, if you account for the millions of people who are clearly missing from the labor market today (and therefore are not employed), you can calculate that the unemployment rate isn't 3.8% but btwn 6.5% and 7.7% depending on which dataset and methodology you prefer to use:
But who is getting these jobs? It's not native-born Americans, but foreigner workers - the former lost 651k jobs over the last 12 months, while employment of foreigners rose by 1.3 million:
And again, this is the continuation of a trend where Americans have been completely left behind in this economy; foreign-born employment is not only several million above its pre-pandemic level but is even above its pre-pandemic trend, while native-born Americans have made no progress in 4 years - in fact, they've gone backwards; a quick note on the different axes here: this chart was constructed so that the different values on the left and right axes are proportional; that means if both groups had the same rate of increase, the lines would have the same slope; also important is that these are not seasonally adjusted datasets so month-over-month changes are as apples-to-oranges comparison in most cases, while year-over-year changes do not have that issue; you can still create a seasonal adjustment yourself, it's just not provided by BLS; lastly, some have tried to blame the decline of native-born employment on Americans retiring, but that would only be enough of a change to slow the rate of growth, not turn it into decline:
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🚨Senate hearing for Treasury Secretary nominee Scott Bessent is live - this is arguably Trump's most important pick given the precarious state of federal finances
Here we go... 🧵
Chairman Crapo praises Bessent in opening statement, citing Bessent's track record in the financial sector, Ivy League education, adjunct professorship
Crapo also alludes to Trump's promises of a Golden Era and the role Bessent will play in that
Ranking member Wyden immediately besmirches Trump in his opening statement
Ironically, Wyden is saying his voters want change - that is, change from what Democrats in DC have done over the last 4 years
Here's the CPI🧵 on today's dumpster fire of a report - hint: inflation isn't dead, you're $6,800 poorer b/c of it, and it's poised to get much worse next year...
First, the headlines:
CPI rose 0.3% M/M, 3.1% Y/Y
Core (ex- food and energy) rose 0.4% M/M, 3.9% Y/Y
Team Transitory™️ has egg on their face for the thousandth time: we haven't been trending toward 2% but 3% - we're there and there's no indication we're going lower:
Consumer staples have gone through the roof since Jan '21 - here's the basic energy components, all up 20% or more:
Jan jobs report🧵- here's what you need to know that the talking heads and gov't statisticians won't tell you, including why the real unemployment rate is btwn 6.3% and 7.4%...
First the headlines:
Nonfarm payrolls rose 353k last month
Unemployment rate steady at 3.7% (more on that later)
Note that updates to the BLS' data make it difficult to compare Jan '24 to prior months, so this monthly change needs an important qualifier...
In brief, things once again look good b/c prior periods were revised down; the new seasonal adjustments and other changes reduced the number of payrolls in every month last year except Dec; cumulative monthly difference is -1.3 million w/ average monthly difference -126k...
Dec CPI 🧵...
Inflation rips the stake out of its chest, looses a blood-chilling scream, and tells the Fed it's ready for another round; real weekly earnings are down 4.5% since Jan '21 and things are poised to get worse...
First, the headlines:
CPI up 0.3% M/M and 3.4% Y/Y
Core CPI (excludes volatile food & energy) up 0.3% M/M and 3.9% Y/Y
For all the talk of "disinflation," no one seems to have been paying attention to the trend that clearly shows us approaching 3%+ and not the 2% target...
Have to briefly mention health insurance, which I did a deep dive on previously; flawed methodology at BLS erroneously drove the index down for whole year, and now it's payback time, w/ index set to regain that ground in the months to come; up 1.1% M/M, down 27.1% Y/Y...
Dec jobs report 🧵: there's SO much bad news under the hood of this report, including the economy shedding 1.5 million full-time jobs in a single month, big downward revisions, and a true unemployment rate between 6.4% and 7.5% - here's the truth you should know...
First, the headlines: nonfarm payrolls rose 216k on the backs of big downward revisions to previous months and unemployment rate remained unchanged at 3.7% - let's delve into why that rate is so low (hint: 676k people left the labor force in Dec)...
LFPR fell hard in Dec, closing the year well below pre-pandemic levels - this is artificially lowering the unemployment rate...
Another round of very mixed data, but in line w/ recession early next year - here's a plan English, deep dive 🧵 on the Nov jobs report, including why the unemployment rate is much higher than the official number:
First, headlines: nonfarm payrolls up 199k, as jobs "increased in manufacturing, reflecting
the return of workers from a strike" exactly as expected; unemployment rate down to 3.7% amid surge in household survey employment (seasonal adj problem?)...
Downward revisions to previous data continue w/ Sep's last estimate unsurprisingly revised lower; 1/5 of all jobs initial added this year have been revised away: