Report on Jobs
Friday 06 August 2010
by: Max Fraad-Wolff and Rick Wolff, t r u t h o u t | Report
Total nonfarm payroll employment declined by 131,000 in July, and the unemployment rate was unchanged at 9.5 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Federal government employment fell, as 143,000 temporary workers hired for the decennial census completed their work. Private-sector payroll employment edged up by 71,000.
We have been in the present labor market swoon since December 2007. We are 30 months into the process. Nearly everything is not getting worse fast. Most economic indicators have seen slow, uneven progress. We are a weary nation and hope is running low. We have received a massive dosage - an overdose- of bad economic news since the winter of 2007.
Things are getting ever so slightly less bad in the aggregate. Our sheriffs are the Treasury and the Fed and they have spent, cut taxes, slashed rates, bought securities and ballooned their balance sheets. They have made the bad less worse, but not appreciable better enough for many. The sheriffs of this rough economic neighborhood are running low on and out of ammunition. The populace is fed up. All that economic toxin still pumps the blood of this economy. Now, the state is having a contractionary direct impact on employment.
Also See: Rick Wolff | Economic Recovery for the Few
Highlights of Today's Report
The pick-up in private sector hiring is a good sign. It is too little and too late in the face of waning state spending. We also have built a huge shadow inventory of the unemployed, similar to the situation in private housing. The shadow inventory of workers includes the discouraged and involuntary part timers. March and April were much stronger months for hiring than June and July 2010. The July numbers are distorted by 143,000 job losses among temporary census workers. Average hours worked increased .1 hours to 33.5hours per week. Average hourly earnings were up 2cents in July.
Lowlights of Today's Report
The duration of unemployment is a very serious issue. 6.6 Million Americans, 44.9% of the unemployed, have been out of work for more than 6 months. U-6, inclusive unemployment that counts discouraged and involuntary part time workers, stayed high at 16.5% in July. State government’s payrolls declined by 10,000 in July. Local governments shed 38,000 jobs last month.
Major conclusion
Persistent cuts in Federal, state and local hiring and spending threaten more than just the monthly job numbers. It is perilous and unwise to slash public goods spending at this time. Public goods provision is about social cohesion and stability as much as GDP and employment. There were 202,000 job losses at the government level with reduced employment at the Federal, state and local levels.
The risk going forward is that hope is ebbing and so is so support. We got such a dose of pain and we are running low on available medicine.
Productivity
From the first quarter of 2009 to the first quarter of 2010, output increased 3.0 percent while hours fell 3.0 percent, yielding an increase in productivity of 6.1 percent.
As productivity and profit rise with stagnant wages and falling employment, we are watching an upward redistribution of wealth amid tough economic times. This has been dramatic and comes as we go into election season. This should be watched moving forward. For the year ended June 2010 wages and salaries rose 1.6%. Over the same year, all items less housing rose in price by 1.9%. Thus, real earnings were flat to down amid sliding benefits and falling employment. Corporate profits have performed better, as have asset markets and values.

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Comments
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Can't even we progressives
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 10:28 — Vic Anderson (not verified)Can't even we progressives Say PROGRESS, instead of perennially "going forward", regardless? Talk about being ALWAYS rightly framed!
Corporate profits up,
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 10:50 — Anonymous (not verified)Corporate profits up, Success!
Since it was neo-liberal
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 14:54 — John McAlpin (not verified)Since it was neo-liberal policies that got us into this mess, what idiot thinks neo-liberasl policies can get us out?
the US economy is in a
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 15:05 — Anonymous (not verified)the US economy is in a double bind right now, facing ballooning unemployment and deficits. We can't tackle them both at the same time, sad but true. And it looks as if which one has to come first has been decided. Americans have adjusted themselves to tragically high unemployment as a norm, and are focusing instead on reducing debt. The process has already started in state and local governance. In my home state of NJ, our current governor has boasted of reducing 11 billion off the state debt-thought I don't believe that for a moment. The city of Newark has announced it will lay off hundreds of police and firefighters as well as asking non-uniformed employees to only work 4 days a week. And in my own home town, two policemen just lost their jobs and various town events have been canceled. One can only hope that once we do see some visible debt reduction happen, maybe things will refocus on unemployment again.
If Mr Tim would simply tell
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 15:48 — Midwest Tom (not verified)If Mr Tim would simply tell us what he did with $2 Trillion last year, we might have a better insight n why the NYC crowd is celebrating, and the rest of the country is suffering.
Gotta disagree with Mr.
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 16:46 — goobagooba (not verified)Gotta disagree with Mr. McAlpin above. If it was neo-liberal policies that got us into the mess, it was reaction by the neo-conservatives that has maintained it.
Jobs have left the country because of corporate greed, not because of consumer need, or the cries of investors for bigger returns. Look at the packages the top 1% awards itself and compare them with what the investors receive; it can't be said that the investors take less of a chance. Their support is less crucial since government has taken the sucker's bet and subsidizes instead of requiring a payoff.
The only grand safety net - Social Security - is threatened by this by design (since the 'haves' feel no responsibility for the 'have nots'). The means of production are maintained and operated by people, not by some abstraction on a spread sheet, though you wouldn't know this if from a study of economics.