STATEMENT: Dr. Christian Weller on Dramatic
Job Loss Numbers
By Christian
E. Weller | November 7, 2008
WASHINGTON,
DC—The election is over and the attention now turns to solving the
country’s problems. Chief among them is the economy, which only became
more pressing with this morning’s jobs numbers. The Bureau of Labor
Statistics just reported that the labor market shrank by another 240,000
in October, bringing the total job loss over the past 10 months to nearly
1.2 million.
At the same
time, the unemployment rate rose again and wage growth slowed. The
deepening labor market contraction that followed years of slow job growth
requires both a short-term response to keep job losses from spiraling
downward and a long-term policy response that will allow American families
to recover their income losses since 2000, when the last business cycle
and strong labor market performance ended.
This
economic downturn may not be called a recession—although it certainly
feels like one for millions of Americans—but there has not been a 10
month decline in the labor market since World War II that did not coincide
with a recession. The last time the U.S. economy lost jobs for 10 months
in a row when it was not officially in a recession lasted from December
1943 to September 1944.
Total job
losses for 2008 now exceed 1 million. And the U.S. labor market shrunk by
nearly 1.2 million jobs over the course of the first 10 months of 2008.
This reflects a deepening of the labor market slump. More than 500,000
jobs were lost in September and October, and the remaining 655,000 were
spread out over the first eight months of this.
Yet this
deepening crisis is not a short-term phenomenon. Even before the labor
market contraction started, job growth was meager in this business cycle,
which started in March 2001. Average monthly job growth amounted to an
annualized rate of 0.6 percent—less than one-third the long-term
historic average job growth rate. And only 11 months during the 81 months
from March 2001 to December 2007 showed above average job growth.
Even those
good times of this business cycle are long gone. The year with the highest
average job growth was 2005, when the economy generated 211,000 new jobs
each month. In 2006, the average amounted to only 175,000 jobs per month,
followed by an average of only 91,300 jobs in 2007. The labor market
started to slow in early 2006, specifically May 2006, when job losses in
construction began in earnest.
This is a
severe labor market slump, especially in some industries. Four
industries—manufacturing, construction, retail, and finance—deserve
particular attention. They all tell a larger story of lingering economic
woe.
It is as if
past policymakers simply gave up on manufacturing. This sector has now
lost jobs for 28 months in a row. It declined by 90,000 jobs in October
alone, marking the largest decline in this sector since July 2003.
Manufacturing saw job losses in 78 months out of the 91 months since March
2001, or 85.7 percent of the time. This is a negative record that should
stir Congress and the administration into action, especially since
manufacturing is still a nexus for good jobs and high productivity.
Construction
was once the success story of this business cycle. Before construction
employment markedly slowed, 47.4 percent of all new private sector jobs
were created in this sector alone from March 2001 through the end of 2005.
But these times are now well behind us. Construction has lost jobs for 16
months in a row, including another decrease of 49,000 in October. After
construction employment growth first turned negative, there were 23 months
with decreasing construction jobs over the course of the past two and a
half years. The last time this happened was the 30-month period that ended
in November 1991.
As
construction went, so did the rest of the economy. Consumer spending, a
major pillar of economic growth in this business cycle, slowed and retail
employment went with it. Retail has now lost jobs for 11 months in a row,
with another decline of 38,100 in October. The last time losses in the
retail sector lasted this long was during and immediately following the
recession in the early 1990s.
Moreover,
the bursting housing bubble brought on record foreclosures and a severe
financial crisis. Financial activities thus experienced sharp losses,
dropping another 24,000 jobs in October. This was the largest monthly job
loss in this sector on record, reflecting the severity of the financial
crisis.
Financial
service employment has dropped for seven months in a row. There were 22
months of job losses in this sector over the past two and a half
years—the first time that this sector has experienced such a dramatic
loss since the 30-month period ending in August 1944. The difference is
that now financial services employment is 80.7 percent greater relative to
total private sector employment than it was in the summer of 1944.
The only
sectors with some job growth in October are health care and the
government. Health care expanded by 26,000 jobs in October and government
employment rose by 23,000 jobs, 21,000 of which were created by local
governments. As the economic crisis makes its way into tax receipts of
states and localities, hiring at this level of government will likely
slow, too.
The
unemployment rate is rising as employers are putting off hiring, hurting
especially the most vulnerable. The overall unemployment rate rose again
to 6.5 percent, its highest level since March 1994.
The
unemployment rates for minorities are especially troublesome. African
Americans’ unemployment rate stood at 11.1 percent in October, and
Hispanics’ unemployment rate was 8.8 percent, compared to 5.9 percent
for whites. The rate for Hispanics is at its highest level since August
1996.
The
unemployment rate for workers with less than a high school degree also
increased in October, reaching 10.3 percent. This is substantially higher
than the 6.3 percent unemployment rate for high school graduates, the 5.3
percent unemployment rate for workers with some college education, and the
3.1 percent unemployment rate for workers with college degrees.
And once
people lose their jobs, it is much harder than in the past to find new
employment. All indicators of long-term unemployment have increased in
October. The median length of unemployment now stands at 10.6 weeks, up
from 10.2 in September. The average length of unemployment increased to
19.7 weeks from 18.4 weeks. And the share of unemployed workers out of a
job for 27 weeks or more rose to 22.3 percent from 21.1 percent. This
means that a growing number of workers will begin to exhaust their
unemployment benefits unless Congress acts again on the unemployment
insurance.
The bad
labor market news keeps on coming. Wage growth is also very slow, failing
to keep pace with inflation. In September 2008, the last month for which
data are available, real hourly earnings were 1.9 percent below those in
September 2007, and 0.7 percent below those in September 2006. Hourly
wages rose by less than 1 percent on an annual basis in October before
inflation is accounted for. This is likely not enough to keep pace with
inflation.
The
prolonged labor market weakness that has lingered since early 2006 has
turned into an outright labor market recession in 2008. America’s
struggling middle class families need policymakers to strengthen their
ongoing policy efforts to solve the problems that have been ailing them
yet been ignored for too long.
Successfully
addressing the problems facing our economy and labor market will require
policies that fall into four categories: stabilization, stimulus,
recovery, and growth. We need to restore our financial markets to normal
functioning, provide an economic stimulus to block a further downward
spiral, put in place policies to recover the jobs that have been lost, and
enact long overdue polices to put the national on a trajectory of strong
long-term economic growth.
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