<<http://nypost.com/business/23936.htm>>

WHAT ARE THEY SMOKING AT THE LABOR DEPT.? 

By JOHN CRUDELE 

 
May 11, 2004 -- DON'T get too excited about all those new jobs that were
supposed to have been created in April. 
I'm not going to waste a lot of my precious space on this, but the bottom
line is that most of the 288,000 jobs that the Labor Department says were
created last month may not really exist. 

They could be figments of statisticians' optimism. 

Anyone who plodded through my column last Thursday knows I predicted that
job growth in April would be better than the 160,000 to 170,000 jobs that
the "pros" were anticipating. 

But I also said, quite emphatically I hope, that the stronger growth
would be an illusion - the result of the Labor Department's computers
making happy predictions about seasonal job creation that could neither
be verified nor justified. 

I'll explain one aspect. 

Back in the March employment report, the government added 153,000
positions to its revised total of 337,000 new jobs because it thought
(but couldn't prove) loads of new companies were being created in this
economy. 

That estimate comes from the Labor Department's "birth/death model." You
can look up these numbers on the Department's Web site. 

As staggering as the assumption about new companies was in March, the
Labor Department got even more brazen in April. 

Last Friday, it was disclosed that these imaginary jobs had been
increased by 117,000 to 270,000 for the latest month - because, I guess,
the stat jockeys got a vision from the gods of spring. 

Without those extra 117,000 make-believe jobs, the total growth for April
would have been just 171,000 - sub-par for an economy that's supposed to
be growing at more than 4 percent a year, but right on the pros' targets.


Take away all 270,000 make-believe jobs and, well, you have the sort of
pessimism that the political pollsters are seeing. 

If I was the suspicious type (and if I thought Washington was smart
enough), I'd suspect a nasty motive behind the sudden surge in these
mystery jobs. But for now, let's just acknowledge their existence. 

Also keep in mind that the government doesn't distinguish between good
companies being created and, say, a guy doing consulting work out of his
basement because he can't find real work. 

What does this new job announcement mean in the real world? 

It means there will be more pressure on the financial markets, as we've
seen for a while but especially since last Thursday. 

It also means that the Federal Reserve now has the excuse it needs to
raise interest rates in June (as I've said before would happen) and will
probably start regretting that move by the end of the summer. 

And President Bush will probably give in to temptation and start crowing
about the economy, going against the mood, as captured by pollsters. 

This will make him look as out of touch with reality as his father did. 

----
"If evil could be branded, its emblem would be the Wal-Mart logo."
-Inthesetimes article

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to