Friday, December 29, 2017

An excellent post by Scott Sumner

One key point that caught my attention:
To summarize, I see little evidence to support the claims of either the Democrats or Republicans. The tax bill is certainly not revolutionary, although it does have some useful reforms. But it also boosts the budget deficit, which is bad for investment. There has been increased regulation in some areas and reduced regulation in others. In addition, there have been no significant moves to slow the growth in overall government spending.
Read the whole blog entryScott Sumner is always worth reading.

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Massachusetts Employment Situation: November Jobs +6,700; U-Rate: 3.6%

OVERVIEW

  • According to the Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development, the state’s total unemployment rate dropped to 3.6 percent in November from 3.7 percent in October.
  • From November 2016 to November 2017, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates Massachusetts has added 65,200 jobs.
  • In November, the Leisure and Hospitality sector lead the way in job creation by adding 4,200 jobs over the month.  
  • The Education and Health Services sector the Construction sector each added 2,800 jobs.
  • The Professional, Scientific and Business Services, which has gained the most jobs year over year (+19,500), gained 2,400 jobs in the past month.
  • Manufacturing added 1,600 jobs while the Information, Financial Activities, Other Services and Trade Transportation and Utilities sectors lost jobs. Of the private sector categories, only the Information sector lost jobs year over year.  
  • Government (Federal, state and local) which has shed 3,500 jobs since last November lost 600 jobs.
  • The EOLWD noted that the state’s labor force participation rate decreased one-tenth of a percentage point to 65.4 percent over the month. However, the LFP rate increased by 0.7 percentage point since November 2016.

ANALYSIS

The state’s unemployment rate 3.6 percent continued to remain lower than the national rate (4.1 percent). “Year-to-date the jobs and labor force estimates indicate a strong and stable economy in the Commonwealth.  November also marks the 13th consecutive month of private sector job growth, " remarked Labor and Workforce Development Secretary Rosalin Acosta

The labor force participation rate, the share of working-age population employed and unemployed, was 65.4 percent with 63,300 residents entering the work pool.  Only 18,300 of those were unable to find work. The state’s long-suffering manufacturing sector employment picture improved in November adding 1,600 jobs which represent an increase of 2,600 year over year.  The growth is significant since the state specializes in high tech rather than mass-production manufacturing. 

The state's largest sectors Professional, Scientific and Business Services and Education and Health Services rose 3.5 percent and 2.1 percent, respectively. 

The lower-wage Leisure and Hospitality sector, however, is up 3.1 percent. Economists agree the state is at full-employment. Massachusetts. 

The number of workers ages 55 and over declined less in the Bay State than the nation. In other words, the demographic drag is offset by the number of older workers who are postponing retirement. Perhaps due to seasonality, the Other Services sector lost 1,900 jobs in the month but is up 3,900 since last November. 





Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Is There a Productivity Miracle Lurking in the Economy? - WSJ

From the Streewise column in the Wall Street JournalIs There a Productivity Miracle Lurking in the Economy?
Perhaps 2018 will be the year productivity finally begins to pick up. Technologies such as speech recognition, online chatbots and machine learning are being quickly adopted, capital spending is picking up and tight labor markets give companies an incentive to find better ways of working.
But productivity defies forecasters, and the lesson of the past is to be humble. This is a story of how little anyone really understands about what moves productivity, even though it’s the key to long-run prosperity—and to what happens to inflation and share and bond prices.

Monday, December 11, 2017

"Did the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Help Those Most in Need?

"Did the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Help Those Most in Need? A County-Level Analysis," a new NBER working paper by Mario J. Crucini and  Nam T. Vu. 

Abstract: 
One of the statements of purpose of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) was "to assist those most impacted by the recession." The ARRA is assessed along this dimension using theoretical concepts from the risk-sharing literature. We estimate a model of income dynamics using a county-level panel of wage income in order to isolate the innovation to income. We then regress these income shocks on ARRA transfers and find 13.1% of the shock is offset by the transfer. While this is a long way from complete risk-sharing, the impacts are economically and statistically significant. Surprisingly, there are large state-contingent effects in the second and third quartiles 25.6% and 15.7% versus a mere 8.5% in the first quartile. By this metric, the policy of helping those most in need was not achieved. 
Paper is available here

Friday, December 8, 2017

US EMPSIT November 2017: 4.1 percent U-Rate; Payrolls +228,000


OVERVIEW
  • The unemployment rate remained at 4.1 percent in November while payrolls expanded by 228,000, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
  • The Labor Force Participation (LFP) remained at 62.7 percent for November. The employment-population ratio was little changed at 60.1 percent. 
  • The manufacturing sector added 31,000 jobs. The BLS reports “that since a recent low in November 2016, manufacturing has increased by 189,000 jobs.”
  • Professional and business services added 46,000 jobs in November and health care added 30,000. 
  • Employment in the other major sectors— mining, wholesale trade, retail trade, transportation and warehousing, information, leisure and hospitality, financial activities and government —changed little. 
  • In November, average hourly earnings for all employees increased by 5 cents to $26.55; over the past year, hourly earnings have risen by 64 cents or 2.5 percent. 
  • The September employment report was revised up from +18,000 to +38,000 and the change in October was revised down from +261,000 to +244,00 Over the past three months, job gains have averaged 170,000 a month.  The six-month average monthly growth is 177,600. From January, the economy added on average 174,000 monthly jobs.

ANALYSIS

In November, the American factory kicked into high gear. Since last year the manufacturing sector has added 189,000 jobs. Subsector growth took place in machinery (+8,000), fabricated metal products (+7,000), computer and electronic products (+4,000), and plastics and rubber products (+4,000).  The payroll employment report exceeded the  Wall Street consensus of 200,000 jobs.  According to an ADP report earlier this week, private sector employment increased by 190,000 jobs in November. The unemployment rolls decreased over the past 12 months by 799,000 workers. The number of part-time for economic reasons remained at 4.8 million. Nonetheless, there is talk of a labor shortage in the manufacturing sector where employers are investing in resources to train new workers and by increasing automation.  The tight labor market suggests that wages should be  increasing faster that today’s reported annual rate of 2.5%. But percentage growth in lower paid jobs since 2007 in the leisure and hospitality sectors (0.2) have outstripped high-value-adding professional and business services (0.1) and the overall job (0.1) growth (See table below). Another view is more generational than structural. According to USAToday, “Some economists say the government's measure of average earnings growth may be skewed downward by the retirements of higher-paid Baby Boomers and the entry into the labor force of lower paid Millennials.” For now, holding a job is more important than higher wages. Overall, the job market is on solid ground giving the Federal Reserve an opportunity to raise rates.





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