U.S. Jobless Rate Exceeds 10% While Payrolls Decline
November 6, 2009
By Tom
Moeller
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· The increase in the jobless rate to 10.2% was due to a 589,000 (-4.4% y/y) decline in household employment which followed a 785,000 September drop. These declines were shallower than the worst monthly declines of this past winter, but not by much. The contraction in the labor force, reflecting more discouraged workers, similarly was reduced m/m from September and from earlier this year. However, the y/y decline of 0.6% was the worst since 1952. · The official unemployment rate continues to pale in comparison to the rate which includes "marginally attached workers" and those who are working part-time for economic reasons. It rose to a record 17.5%. Another tally of joblessness indicates that with "discouraged workers" the unemployment rate rose last month to 10.7%. Not only are more individuals unemployed or have stopped looking for work, but the median duration of unemployment jumped last month to a record high of 18.7 weeks. The ranks of those unemployed for 27 weeks or more rose to 5.594 million (145.9% y/y), also an historic high. By educational attainment, those with a high school diploma but no college saw employment fall 6.3% y/y while employment of those with a bachelor's degree or higher rose 0.1% y/y. · Nonfarm payrolls fell 190,000 which roughly equaled expectations for a 175,000 worker decline. So far during this recession employment has fallen by a total of 7.4 million, by far the record for a 22-month period. In percentage terms, jobs are down 5.3% since the 2007 peak, also a record. If there is good news, it's that the decline in payroll declines moderated to an average 188,000 over the last three months versus the hefty rate of 701,000 this past winter. · Just 14.9% of industries raised employment levels during the last twelve months (a new low), compared with 65.5% during 2006. However, over the last three months, the percentage of firms lifting employment has more-than-doubled to 31.0%. · By industry last month declines in payrolls were broad-based, but they are easing from earlier this year. In private service industries they fell 61,000 (-2.9% y/y). Payrolls fell in retail trade (-3.8% y/y), financial (-4.8% y/y), professional & tech services (-3.4% y/y), but they rose in education (+0.8% y/y) and in the health sector (2.3% y/y). Employment in the government sector also has been weak as budgets shrank with lower tax revenues. Last month the number of jobs overall were unchanged (-0.4% y/y) as were the number of local gov't jobs (-0.9% y/y). Factory sector jobs fell 61,000 (-1.6% y/y) last month, continuing a decline which began in 1998. The decline totals roughly six million jobs, or one-third of the workforce. Construction jobs fell 62,000, after declining an average 88,000 each month this year. · Average hourly earnings increased just 0.3% during October. That slim gain was enough to pull the y/y increase down to 2.4% which was its weakest since late-2004, off from 4.2% reached during 2007. Earnings in the factory sector were unchanged for the second month in the last three (+2.6% y/y). The durable sector's earnings rose 0.3% (3.7%) after a 0.4% September increase. Earnings in the private service sector rose just 0.2% (2.7% y/y) while construction sector earnings recovered 1.5% (2.9% y/y) after a September decline. · The figures referenced above are available in Haver's USECON database. Additional detail can be found in the LABOR and in the EMPL databases. · Housing's Great Fall: Putting Household Balance Sheets Together Again from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Lois can be found here.
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Employment: 000s |
October | September | August |
Y/Y |
2008 | 2007 |
2006 |
|
Payroll Employment |
-190 | -219 | -154 |
-4.0% |
-0.4% | 1.1% |
1.8% |
| Previous | -- | -263 | -201 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
|
Manufacturing |
-61 | -45 | -55 |
-11.6% |
-3.3% | -2.0% |
-0.5% |
| Construction | -62 | -68 | -66 | -15.6% | -5.5% | -0.8% | 4.9% |
| Service Producing | -61 | -105 | -24 | -2.4% | 0.2% | 1.6% | 1.8% |
|
Average
Weekly Hours |
33.0 | 33.0 | 33.1 |
33.5
(Oct. '08) |
33.6 | 33.8 |
33.9 |
|
Average Hourly
Earnings |
0.3% | 0.1% | 0.4% |
2.4% |
3.8% | 4.0% |
3.9% |
|
Unemployment Rate |
10.2% | 9.8% | 9.7% |
6.2%
(Sept. '08) |
5.8% | 4.6% |
4.6% |
© 2009 HAVER ANALYTICS. All rights reserved.