PI News - March 11, 2010
Economic Policy Institute

http://www.epi-data.org/epinews/epinews20100311.html

EPI applauds the new Local Jobs for America Act by U.S.
Representative George Miller (D., Calif.), a bold job
creation policy that incorporates some of the
recommendations of EPI's economists and policy analysts.

"Exactly the kind of bold response we need"

The legislation, which was introduced March 10, would keep
more teachers in classrooms, more police officers on the
beat, and make other investments in local communities around
the country. Like the American Jobs Plan EPI issued late
last year, Miller's Local Jobs for America Act recognizes
the importance of investing in schools, creating public
service jobs, and providing fiscal relief to state and local
governments to preserve existing jobs and create new ones.
EPI Vice President Ross Eisenbrey issued a statement calling
the Act "exactly the kind of bold response we need."
<http://www.epi.org/analysis_and_opinion/entry/epi_applauds_local_jobs_for_america_act/>

By targeting state and local job creation, Miller's bill
also addresses some of the looming job losses that EPI has
warned could result from a lack of policy action. Last
November, EPI Policy Analyst Ethan Pollack said that without
fiscal relief, state and local governments would be forced
to make additional budget cuts, which would result in the
loss of millions of jobs in the public and private sector
over the next three years. His paper, Dire States, showed
how fiscal relief could save jobs by helping to prevent
large budget shortfalls.
<http://www.epi.org/publications/entry/bp252/>

A labor market stuck on pause

The Local Jobs for America Act was introduced amid new signs
that aggressive policy action is needed to address the
persistent jobs crisis. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
reported last week that 36,000 more jobs were lost in
February as the overall unemployment rate remained unchanged
at 9.7%. New data released earlier this week show that while
the number of job openings is slowly improving, there are
still more than five unemployed workers for every job
opening. <http://www.epi.org/publications/entry/5646/>

Economist Heidi Shierholz, in her latest analysis of the
unemployment data, described a labor market stuck on pause.
She stressed that while unemployment remained unchanged,
underemployment actually increased, to 16.8% in February
from 16.5% in January. Shierholz also pointed out that many
workers who had kept their jobs were working fewer hours,
and that all those lost work hours added up to 2.8 million
full-time jobs. In other words, while the United States
currently needs 11.1 million jobs to return to pre-recession
levels of employment, the "effective" jobs gap is a much
larger 13.9 million, once lost work hours are factored in.
<http://www.epi.org/publications/entry/jobs_picture_20100305/>

In addition, Algernon Austin, director of EPI's Program on
Race, Ethnicity, and the Economy, stressed that black and
Hispanic workers remain particularly challenged to find a
job. While unemployment stood at 8.8% for white workers in
February, it was 12.4% for Hispanics and 15.8% for black
workers. Austin discussed this problem of persistently high
black unemployment on PBS NewsHour, where he noted that even
highly educated blacks had much higher rates of joblessness
than their white counterparts. EPI closely tracks
unemployment by race, region, gender, and level of education
on its Economy Track Web site.
<http://www.economytrack.org/unemployment.php>

==========

Job market stuck on "pause"

by Heidi Shierholz

EPI's Jobs Picture for March 5th, 2010

http://www.epi.org/publications/entry/jobs_picture_20100305/

This morning's Bureau of Labor Statistics employment report
showed 36,000 payroll jobs lost in February, though a
portion of that decline may have been due to the record
snowstorms along the east coast.  The data in the household
survey, used to calculate the unemployment rate, was likely
less affected by the storms, and thus showed conditions in
the labor market holding steady in February, with the
unemployment remaining at 9.7%.

However, the underemployment rate (which includes not just
the officially unemployed, but also jobless workers who have
given up looking for work and part-time workers who want
full time jobs) rose from 16.5% to 16.8%, offsetting some of
the gains made in January, as the number of involuntary
part-timers increased by nearly half a million workers.  In
February, there were 2.6 million marginally attached
workers, 8.8 million involuntary part-timers, and 14.9
million unemployed workers in the United States, for a total
of 26.2 million workers who are either unemployed or
underemployed.

With over six unemployed workers per job opening, unemployed
workers continue to have an extremely difficult time finding
work.  In February, the average unemployment spell was 29.7
weeks, and the median unemployment spell was 19.4 weeks,
both slight improvements from January.   In February, for
the first time in over a year, the number of long-term
unemployed (workers without jobs for more than six months)
decreased (by 180,000), but still remains extremely high at
6.1 million.  More than two in every five unemployed workers
in this country have been unemployed for over six months.

The chart below shows the long-term unemployment rate - the
percent of the labor force that has been unemployed for more
than six months.  February's value of 4.0% dwarfs even the
recession of the early 1980s, a recession that was marked by
extremely high unemployment.

Since the start of the recession in December 2007, the labor
market has shed 8.4 million payroll jobs.  This number,
however, understates the size of the gap in the labor market
by failing to take into account continuing population
growth: the labor market should have added  around 2.7
million jobs since December 2007 to accommodate this growth.
This means the labor market is now roughly 11.1 million jobs
below what would be needed to restore the pre-recession
unemployment rate.  In order to fully fill in this 11.1
million job gap in the labor market in the next three years
(by February 2013), employment would have to increase by
415,000 jobs every month between now and then.  (Note: The
methodology for calculating the size of the gap and what
would be needed to fill it can be found at the end of this
report.)

And even the 11.1 million jobs gap understates the slack in
the labor market because it fails to take into account the
decline in hours worked for those who have kept their jobs.
At the start of the recession in December 2007, the length
of the average workweek in the private sector was 34.7
hours.  In February, it was 33.8 hours.  The decline in the
total number of hours worked in the private sector since the
start of the recession attributable to reduced hours alone
(i.e., not job loss) is equivalent to 2.8 million jobs.
This means that the "effective" gap in the labor market is
on the order of 13.9 million jobs (11.1 million plus 2.8
million).

It should be noted that the length of the average workweek
decreased slightly in February, from 33.9 to 33.8 hours, but
that was likely a reflection of time lost due to the severe
winter weather rather than continued deterioration in hours.

Demographic breakdowns in unemployment show that, while all
major groups have experienced substantial increases over
this downturn, men, racial and ethnic minorities, young
workers, and workers with lower levels of schooling are
getting hit particularly hard.

    * In February, unemployment was 18.5% among workers age
    16-24, 8.6% among workers age 25-54, and 7.1% among
    workers age 55+ (increases of 6.7, 4.5, and 3.9
    percentage points, respectively, since the start of the
    recession).

    * Unemployment was 15.8% among black workers, 12.4%
    among Hispanic workers, and 8.8% among white workers
    (increases of 6.8, 6.1, and 4.4 percentage points,
    respectively, since the start of the recession).

    * Unemployment was 10.7% for men, compared to 8.6% for
    women (increases of 5.6 and 3.7 percentage points since
    the start of the recession).

    * For workers age 25 or older, unemployment reached
    10.5% for high school educated workers and 5% for those
    with a college degree (increases of 5.8 and 2.9
    percentage points, respectively, since the start of the
    recession).

Nominal hourly wage growth has been generally slowing since
the summer of 2008 and remains low - nominal hourly wages
grew at a 1.3% annualized rate over the last three months.
With inflation currently at around 2.3%, this means real
wages are falling.  Average weekly earnings had seen recent
improvements, though the fall in hours (likely due to the
snowstorms) meant nominal weekly paychecks did not see
growth in February (down by $1.23).

One good sign in the payroll data was in temporary help
services, which added 47,500 jobs, the fifth straight month
of gains. This is good news because this sector tends to
lead broader recoveries.  One key sector holding steady was
manufacturing, with the addition of 1,000 jobs.  Retail
trade also held steady (-400 jobs).  Education and health
services added 32,000 jobs.

Construction saw continued large declines, at -64,000, with
most of that in nonresidential.  The federal government
added 7,000, state governments added 6,000, and local
governments saw big declines at -31,000.

The $15 billion jobs bill passed by the Senate and the House
is, unfortunately, about 30 times too small. The bill, which
would give employers tax breaks for new hires, is likely to
create only a couple of hundred thousand jobs, while the
hole that this downturn has torn in the labor market is now
at 11.1 million jobs.  If Congress doesn't act quickly and
at a sufficient scale, we will see crippling rates of
unemployment for years.

 -  Research assistance provided by Kathryn Edwards and
 Andrew Green.

Methodology: The Jobs Gap

The jobs gap is a measure of the number of payroll jobs
needed to return to the pre-recession rate of unemployment
(while holding the pre-recession labor force participation
rate constant, meaning no erosion in the relative size of
the labor force).

Calculating the size of the current jobs gap

The gap is the number of jobs lost since the start of the
recession (December 2007) plus the number of jobs that would
have been needed to keep up with population growth over this
period. The working-age population has grown 2.0% (0.9%
annually) since the start of the recession, according to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics' household survey. Because there
tend to be large discontinuities in the population data each
January due to the fact that the January data are adjusted
to reflect updates in the U.S. Census Bureau population
controls, only January population data were used, and other
months' population data were extrapolated.

Calculating how many jobs are needed every month to close
the gap in three years

We assume that the population will continue to grow at the
same annual rate (0.9%) it grew from January 2009 to January
2010. How many jobs are needed each month to close the gap
by February 2013 is the difference between February 2010
payroll employment and what payroll employment in February
2013 would be if it had grown at the same rate as the
working-age population from December 2007 to February 2010
and continues to grow at a 0.9% annual rate until February
2013, divided by the number of months (36).

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