Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: 2024

    • Headline index rose 0.3% m/m, pushing the y/y rate up to 3.4% from 3.1% in November.
    • About half of monthly increase due to 0.5% m/m increase in shelter prices.
    • Core index also rose 0.3% m/m with the y/y rate slipping to 3.9% from 4.0%.
    • Latest week’s initial claims lower than forecast.
    • December 30 week’s continuing claims down 34,000 from prior week.
    • Insured unemployment rate at 1.2%, down slightly from prior week’s 1.3%.
    • Total mortgage applications rose sharply in the first week of January.
    • Applications for loans to purchase and to refinance also rose in the first week of 2024.
    • The average effective rates on loans started the year higher than the last week in December.
    • Deficit decline is slight following October widening.
    • Exports fall for second straight month.
    • Imports also decline sharply.
    • Gasoline prices ease.
    • Crude oil costs decline.
    • Natural gas prices move up.
  • The unemployment rate in the European Monetary Union in November 2023 is tied for its all-time low, a low reached in June 2023. The percentile standing of the unemployment rate puts it in its 0.3 percentile, lower than any of the EMU countries in the table. Within the Monetary Union, Belgium's unemployment rate stands at its 10.8 percentile, the same as Germany’s. In France the unemployment rate has a 6.4 percentile standing, and the Dutch unemployment rate has a 9.3 percentile standing. The United States where the unemployment rate is within a stone’s throw of a 50-year low is at its 8.4-percentile. Japan, that chronically runs very low unemployment rates, has its rate at its 16.5 percentile.

    Historically low rates of unemployment- The only entries in the table with unemployment rate above their historic median are the United Kingdom where the claimant rate is at its 61.6 percentile. The European Monetary Union member country that has an above-median unemployment rate is Luxembourg, a very small country with the concentration of jobs in the services sector and in the financial sector. Its unemployment rate has an 81.7 percentile standing, although it has the sixth lowest reported unemployment rate among the twelve countries in the table. Traditionally, Luxembourg has run a relative low rate of unemployment, that accounts for the relatively high standing of a union-wide moderate unemployment rate.

    The EMU rate falls on balance over 12-months- The unemployment rate for the European Monetary Union in November has fallen over 12 months by 0.3 percentage points while looking at the member countries on the table only five of twelve countries in the table have seen their own unemployment rates fall over 12 months. This EMU-wide rate falls because countries with falling unemployment rates generally had relatively sizable drops over 12 months while the large countries reporting in the table such as Germany and France and moderately sized Portugal, each had an unemployment rate increase of just 0.1 percentage point over 12 months.

    Still, rate declines appear to less common- However, looking at monthly patterns, we see four countries with unemployment rates declining in November, only three with the unemployment rates declining in October, and only one with employment rate declining in September. Unemployment rates were unchanged in November in four countries, in October six countries had unemployment rates unchanged from their level in September, and in September six countries had unemployment rate levels unchanged from their level in August. The declines in the unemployment rate are becoming rarer in the monetary union and that's not surprising when looking at the historic rankings and the current low levels of unemployment rates.

    Paradox of the lower EMU standing than for any member country- The unemployment rate and the monetary union has a much lower ranking than for individual member countries because it's the coincidence of having low rates and all the countries. That synchronization is responsible for making the EMU overall unemployment rate rank so low. Having only the smallest country listed in the table with an unemployment rate above its median clearly underscores how widespread low unemployment has become across the monetary union.

    • Nonrevolving credit usage increases.
    • Revolving loans jump.
    • Metals & lumber prices strengthen.
    • Textile costs increase.
    • Crude oil prices are little changed.