The economy added
166,000 jobs last month. Is that a lot, or a little? If the economy
added jobs, why did the unemployment rate stay the same –
shouldn’t it have gone down? Are these new employees mostly burger
flippers? Is it true that when people lose their unemployment
benefits, they’re no longer counted as unemployed? Have a lot of
people gotten discouraged and given up looking for work? What kind of
people are most likely to find work?
I do a lot of
interviews on radio call-in shows. The most common phone call goes
something like this: “Why isn’t there something out there that
explains what’s going on in the economy in clear English?” To the
many talk radio callers, cameramen who’ve helped me do satellite
hook-ups with TV shows, and waiters who’ve approached me to
follow-up on one of my speeches, I say: This column’s for you.
Economists generally
consider any unemployment rate under 5% to be ‘full employment’,
which means that even when things are great, there’s still a delay
between the time people leave one job and take another. The current
unemployment rate is 4.7%. This rate is very low, but not as low as
during the tech boom of the late 1990s. However, the jobs of that era
were far more likely to be paid for by investors who were waiting for
a company to show its first profit, than now, where the jobs growth is
associated with high profits.
The reason that the
unemployment rate sometimes stays the same (or even goes down) even
when jobs increase, is that the two numbers are based on different
surveys. The 166,000 jobs number is based on something called ‘the
establishment survey’, which polls existing companies to measure
their payroll growth. The unemployment rate is based on something
called ‘the household survey’ which (not surprisingly) polls
individual households. The household survey counts self-employed
people; the establishment survey does not. Real estate agents, for
instance, along with many small business owners, are not generally
counted by the establishment survey. The unemployment rate counts
people who are not working, but are looking for work, whether
they’re on unemployment compensation or not. Not many people are
unemployed long enough to lose benefits anyway. The largest group of
unemployed is the group that’s out of work for 5 weeks or less. In
fact over 2/3s of these folks are unemployed for less than 4 months.
The average worker is
making $17.58 per hour, which is up by almost 4% from a year ago, so
we’re not exactly a nation of burger boys, but the growth in wages
could be a little higher. If you want to have a life filled with
gainful employment, pretty much the best thing you can do is not drop
out of school. As the chart above shows, as of last month, high school
drop-outs had an unemployment rate of 7.3%, those who finish college,
on the other hand, have an unemployment rate of 2.1%. Even for those
who can’t afford college, high school is free, and community college
is extremely affordable. Do both and you cut your chance of
unemployment in half.