Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: May 2023

    • Private payrolls double March gain.
    • Job strength includes leisure, education & health services industries.
    • Pay increases continue to moderate.
    • 51.9 in Apr. vs. 51.2 in Mar., showing expansions from June ’20 except Dec. ’22.
    • Sub-indexes are mixed: new orders (56.1) and supplier deliveries (48.6) rise while business activity (52.0) and employment (50.8) decline.
    • Prices index ticks up to 59.6, having been above the 50-dividing line since June ’17.
    • Mortgage applications declined in the week ended April 28.
    • The effective rates on fixed loans eased in the latest week.
    • The average loan size rose in the latest week.
  • The unemployment rate in the European Monetary Union had reached a new low at 6.5% in March, down from 6.6% in January and February. On data back to the year 2000, Germany and France both have new low levels of unemployment. All the members of the monetary union listed in the table with the exception of Luxembourg report unemployment rates that are below their historic medians. Luxembourg is above its median by a small amount with a rank percentile standing at its 52.9 percentile; it's median occurs at its 50th percentile.

    Among the twelve countries that report in the table, only two show about employment rates that are not below the 30th percentile in ranking; Luxembourg and Spain whose standing is at its 31.7 percentile. Portugal is close at the 29.4 percentile, Austria is at the 25.6 percentile with Greece at a 24.8 percentile standing.

    There also are rank percentile standings below their 16th percentile – seven of them. Unemployment rates continue to broadly fall in the European Monetary Union despite high inflation and despite ongoing rate hikes by the European Central Bank. There are other central banks in Europe hiking rates as well as a substantial array of hikes is being executed in the United States – hikes from the U.S. continued at the Fed’s meeting today.

    Rate declines in EMU Among the 12 reporting EMU countries, all but four have unemployment rate declines over three months; two of them, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, have no change in their unemployment rates over three-months. Over 6 months all but three countries have declines in their unemployment rates and over 12 months all but five countries have declines in their unemployment rates among the twelve European Monetary Union countries listed in the table.

    In comparison, the United States has a decline in the unemployment rate in March. On the same timeline, it has an unemployment rate that is in the bottom 2% of all unemployment rates since 2000. The U.S. employment rate is unchanged over three months and six months, but it's lower by one-tenth of one percentage point over 12 months.

    The unemployment rate profile that we see in Europe is surprising in part because inflation rates in Europe remain so high - although the rate hikes in the United States have been more extreme than in Europe and the U.S. unemployment rate has remained low, unemployment rates in Europe surprise in the wake of ECB policy as well. In the European Monetary Union, the unemployment rate has fallen by 3-tenths of a percentage point over 12 months, more than it's fallen in the U.S.

    • Sales rise to roughly two-year high.
    • Light truck & auto sales strengthen.
    • Imported vehicle sales rise moderately.
    • Openings level is lowest in nearly two years.
    • Declines are widespread.
    • Hiring declines are mixed amongst industries.
    • Layoffs & discharges surge.
    • New factory orders rebounded in March, increasing 0.9% m/m following declines in both January and February.
    • By contrast, shipments edged down 0.1% m/m in March, their fourth decline in the past five months.
    • Unfilled orders rose 0.9% m/m in March, their first increase in three months.
    • Inventories fell 0.8% m/m, their third consecutive monthly decline.
    • Retail gasoline prices weaken.
    • Crude oil prices decline to four-week low.
    • Natural gas prices steady.