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Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Charting the US Jobs Recovery - DelMarva + DC Edition - June 2014

Most media discussions on the US Jobs Recovery focus on just one number - the headline Unemployment Rate.  To add color to the first number, financial pundits like to add a second number - the Labor Force Participation Rate.  Both are intertwined and affect each other.  But in the aftermath of the Great Recession, there is a third, much more meaningful number that is almost never discussed - the Employment to Population Ratio.

Definitions

Now, what are these numbers?  Many people will give you a technical description that can be hard to grasp and make your eyes glaze over the minute you hear them.  But the reality is simple.

The Unemployment Rate is the percentage of:

PEOPLE WHO WANT  A JOB BUT DON'T HAVE ONE (Unemployed)/
LABOR FORCE

The Labor Force is:

PEOPLE WHO WANT AND HAVE JOBS (Employed) + PEOPLE WHO WANT A JOB BUT DON'T HAVE ONE AND ARE LOOKING FOR ONE (Unemployed)

The Labor Force Participation Rate is percentage of:

[PEOPLE WHO WANT AND HAVE JOBS (Employed) + PEOPLE WHO WANT A JOB BUT DON'T HAVE ONE AND ARE LOOKING FOR ONE (Unemployed)]/
WORKING AGE PEOPLE

Working Age People are generally defined as PEOPLE WHO ARE 16 YEARS AND OLDER.  In reality, they are:

[PEOPLE WHO WANT AND HAVE JOBS (Employed) + PEOPLE WHO WANT A JOB BUT DON'T HAVE ONE AND ARE LOOKING FOR ONE (Unemployed) + PEOPLE WHO ARE NOT IN THE LABOR FORCE (Not in Labor Force)]

The category PEOPLE WHO ARE NOT IN THE LABOR FORCE includes:


PEOPLE WHO ARE IN THE MILITARY
PEOPLE WHO ARE INSTITUTIONALIZED
PEOPLE WHO ARE STUDENTS
PEOPLE WHO ARE HOMEMAKERS
PEOPLE WHO ARE RETIRED
PEOPLE WHO ARE MARGINALLY ATTACHED TO LABOR FORCE (INCLUDING DISCOURAGED WORKERS)


The Employment to Population Ratio is the percentage of:

PEOPLE WHO WANT AND HAVE JOBS/
WORKING AGE PEOPLE

In other words, PEOPLE WHO WANT AND HAVE JOBS/
[PEOPLE WHO WANT AND HAVE JOBS + PEOPLE WHO WANT A JOB BUT DON'T HAVE ONE AND ARE LOOKING FOR ONE + PEOPLE WHO ARE NOT IN THE LABOR FORCE


How does this work out?

According to this chart from the popular financial blog, Calculated Risk, the US, in May 2014, gained back all the jobs lost since the Great Recession started in November 2007.








But this is deceptive.  For one, the working age population of the US grew by 16.156 million people or 6.81% from 2007 to July 2014, while the labor force grew by 2.899 million people or only 1.89% during the same period.   The number of employed persons grew by only 305,000 people and unemployed people grew by 2.593 million people or 36.63% during the same period. People Not in the Labor Force grew by 13.258 million or 16.84% during the same period.

United States
Employment Situation
In Thousand Persons




















2007 to July 2014

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 July 2014 Variance % Variance
Civilian Non Institutional Population 231,867 233,788 235,801 237,830 239,618 243,284 245,679 248,023 16,156 6.97%
Labor Force 153,124 154,287 154,142 153,889 153,617 154,975 155,389 156,023 2,899 1.89%
Employed 146,047 145,362 139,877 139,064 139,869 142,469 143,929 146,352 305 0.21%
Unemployed 7,078 8,924 14,265 14,825 13,747 12,506 11,460 9,671 2,593 36.63%
Not in Labor Force 78,743 79,501 81,659 83,941 86,001 88,310 90,290 92,001 13,258 16.84%

Source: bls.gov


For the United States, the headline Unemployment Rate has dropped down significantly, from a peak of 9.9% in 2009 to just 6.2% as of July 2014.  The Labor Force Participation Rate continues to drop and is now at 62.9% - levels not seen since the late 1970's when women started entering the workforce in droves.  The Employment to Population Ratio has only recovered marginally from its recessionary low of 58.3% to just 59% in July 2014.  It is nowhere near its pre-recession average.  In other words, job growth has been growing only barely faster than the growth in the working age population.






Economists have attributed to this phenomenon to increased retirements among the elderly.  But the Bureau of Labor and Statistics itself  is projecting large increases in the Labor Force Participation Rate among people aged 65 and older. The reality is fewer people can afford to retire.


Regional Comparison

So how does the DELMARVA + DC Region stack up to the rest of the United States?

Delaware





The state of Delaware is in a funk, employment-wise.  Its Labor Force Participation Rate, at 61% as of June 2014, is even lower than the 62.7% Labor Force Participation Rate the state registered in 1976, the earliest available BLS.Gov data.  Although its Unemployment Rate has dropped from a peak of 8.0% in 2010, to just 6% as of June 2014, its Employment to Population Ratio, at 57.3% as of June 2014, is still hovering near the bottom at 56.7% in 2013.

Maryland

Like Delaware, Maryland's Labor Force Participation Rate continues to trend lower, hitting 66.6% as of June 2014 - levels not seen since the late 1970s.  Its Employment to Population Ratio has yet to bottom out. At 62.7% as of June 2014, it is reaching levels not seen since the early 1980s.  Its Unemployment Rate, however, has dropped sharply, from a peak of 7.9% as of 2010 to just 5.8% as of June 2014.  As the previous data indicates, much of the drop has come from people dropping out of the labor force altogether.



Virginia

Virginia has seen a sharp uptick in its labor force participation rate, from a post-recessionary bottom of 66.4% in 2013, to 67.2% as of June 2014.  Likewise, its Employment to Population Ratio has improved to 63.6% as of June 2014.  Unemployment Rate has dropped from its 2010 peak of 7.1% to just 5.3% as of June 2014.



District of Columbia

The District of Columbia's Labor Force Participation bottomed out at 67.8% in 2011, bounced up to the 69.3% level for 2012 and 2013 and is down again to 68.2% as of June 2014.  Its Employment to Population Ratio bounded up sharply from a low of 60.9% as of 2011 to 63.5% as of 2013 and now stands at 63.2% as of June 2014.  Its Unemployment Rate, which reached a peak of 10.2% as of 2011, now stands at 7.4% as of June 2014.

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