04 May 2012

Jobs Picture Comparison: January 2009 v. April 2012



I ran the numbers comparing January, 2009, to April, 2012:

 January 2009:

Civilian labour force:  153,716m
Employed:  142,099m
Unemployed:  11,616m
Not in labour force:  81,023m
Not in the labour force, but who want a job now:  5,682m
Participation Rate:  65.5%
Average Weeks Unemployed:  19.8
Unemployment rate:  7.6%

April 2012

Civilian labour force:  154,365m
Employed:  141,865m
Unemployed:  12,500m
Not in labour force:  88,419m
Not in the labour force, but who want a job now:   6,299m
Participation rate:  63.6%
Average Weeks Unemployed:  39.1
Unemployment rate:  8.1%

Change:

Civilian labour force:  + .422%
Employed:  - .1647%
Unemployed:  + 7.61%
Not in labour force:  + 9.13%
Not in the labour force, but who want a job now:   +10.86%
Participation rate:  - 2.9%
Average Weeks Unemployed:  + 97.47%
Unemployment rate:  + 6.6%

Change in nonfarm payrolls, January 2009 – April 2012

Total: +0.5%
Total private: +0.6%
Goods producing: -7.9%
Manufacturing: -5.5%
Service providing, private: +1.0%
Government: -0.1%
Federal government: +1.0%


The number of actual employed persons fell by 169,000.




Note that the biggest and steepest plunge has taken place since the Obama recovery started in June 2009.  The U-6 rate held steady in April nonetheless at 14.5%, even with the increased exodus of workers from the workforce.  

Real unemployment rate: "11.6%. Reason for difference: organic growth of labor force which grows alongside the broader population…the widely accepted definition of the labor pool, that used by the CBO and all other government forecasting agencies, assumes a 90,000 growth in the labor force every month as it has to keep in line with the growth of the US population! The implication is simple: using a real labor force participation rate long-term average of 65.8%, the real unemployment rate in April was 11.6%, based on the 5.4 million additional workers that should be counted as part of the U-3 which then means that the real number of unemployed is not 12.5 million but 17.9 million, which in turn implies a 11.6% unemployment rate in the US."

Hope.  Change.  Chronic unemployment.



2 comments:

  1. WOw...
    That is actually pretty sad...
    It is amazing how many people, businesses have gone Golt in America...

    ROFLOL...

    But again, why wouldn't they... You take away one's freedom, you take away their industry, enterprise...

    I guess commies never get... Again, not good in Math...

    ReplyDelete
  2. I hope we have major change in November. Many more months of the "rosy" picture the President claimed yesterday and we'll start applying for PIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Spain) qualification....

    ReplyDelete