Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: August 2023

    • Real spending rise is strongest since January.
    • Wage & salary growth weakens.
    • Growth in price index remains low.
    • Index remains below the 50-expansion level.
    • New orders & production indexes rise above the expansion level.
    • Prices paid index rebounds.
    • Initial claims inch lower for a third week.
    • Insured unemployment rises, but very modestly.
    • Insured unemployment rate remains in tight 1.1%-1.2% band.
  • Unemployment rates in the European Monetary Union are stationary at 6.4% in July after falling in June to 6.4% from 6.5% in May.

    Country level results: Among the twelve European Monetary Union members who report unemployment rates early, individual country unemployment rates fell in Belgium, Spain, Ireland, and Greece in July. Unemployment rates rose in Austria, Finland, France, Italy, and in the Netherlands. Broadly speaking, unemployment rates in the monetary union are trending lower. However, the data for July offer a cautionary tale regarding where trends are headed. At the bottom of the table, we provide reference unemployment rates for the United States, the up-to-date claimant rate of unemployment in the United Kingdom, and the unemployment rate for Japan. The U.K. and Japan both saw elevated unemployment rates in July compared to June. The U.S. rate continued to snake down after having seen a relatively sharp increase in the unemployment rate in May that has since unwound.

    Sequential trends Sequential trends for unemployment rates show that for the overall European Monetary Union rate the unemployment rate is down by 0.3 percentage points over 12 months; it's also down by 0.3 percentage points over six months; it is lower by 0.1 percentage points over three months. Trends across countries show declines in the unemployment rate over 12 months, six months and three months for Italy, Ireland, Greece, and Spain. Portugal shows an increase over 12 months, with declines over six months and three months. Other countries show increases on all horizons; those are Austria, Finland, France, and Luxembourg. The Netherlands shows an increase over 12 months and three months, with no change over six months.

    Ranking countries by their level of unemployment We can also look at the broad rankings for the unemployment rate. Here we find that all the monetary union countries except Luxembourg and Austria have an unemployment rate that ranks in the lower 50% of its distribution of unemployment rates (on data since 1994) marking them all as below their historic medians on this timeline. Belgium, Germany, France, and Ireland all have unemployment rates that are in the lower 10 percentile of their respective historic queues of unemployment rate observations. These are countries with exceptionally low unemployment rates compared to their own historic standards. Make no mistake: European labor markets are tight! Among the countries with unemployment rates below they're medians but somewhat higher, we have Greece with the 40.7 percentile standing, Spain with a 25.9 percentile standing and Finland with the 22.4 percentile standing. All of these are moderately low to still exceptionally low unemployment rates indicating strong labor market conditions across the monetary union- just about everywhere.

    • Disappointing employment gain is nearly half of July’s.
    • Service-sector hiring slowdown is led by leisure & hospitality.
    • Pay increases decelerate broadly.
    • Two consecutive gains follow three monthly declines.
    • Changes are mixed amongst regions.
    • $91.18 billion deficit in July, slightly larger than expected.
    • Exports rebound 1.5%, the first m/m gain since March.
    • Imports rise 1.9% following two straight m/m drops.
    • GDP increased 2.1% q/q (SAAR) in the second estimate vs. 2.4% in the advance.
    • Downward revision to business spending on equipment was the major source.
    • GDP and PCE price inflation moderated even further.
    • Small decline in total corporate profits with an increase in foreign profits.