| by Paul Craig
Roberts
( December 9,
2012, Washington DC, Sri Lanka Guardian) Statistician John Williams
(shadowstats.com) calls the government’s latest jobs and unemployment reports
“nonsense numbers.”
If the U.S. government will mislead the public about unemployment, it will also mislead about Syria, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Somalia, Pakistan, Yemen, Lebanon, Palestine, Russia, China, and 9/11. The government fits its story to its agenda.
There are a
number of ongoing problems with the released numbers. For example, the
concurrent-seasonal factor adjustments are unstable. The birth-death model adds
non-existent jobs each month that are then taken out in the annual downward
benchmark revisions. Williams calculates that the job overstatement through
November averages 45,000 monthly. In other words, employment gains during 2012
have been overstated by about 500,000 jobs. Another problem is that each
month’s jobs number is boosted by downside revision of the previous month’s
jobs number. Williams reports that the 146,000 new jobs reported for November
“was after a significant downside revision to October’s reporting. Net of
prior-period revisions, November’s seasonally-adjusted monthly gain was
97,000.”
Even if we
believe the government that 146,000 new jobs materialized during November, that
is the amount necessary to stay even with population growth and therefore could
not be responsible for reducing the unemployment rate from 7.9% to 7.7%. The
reduction is due to how the unemployed are counted.
The 7.7% rate is
known as the “headline rate.” It is the rate you hear in the news. Its official
designation is U.3.
The Bureau of
Labor Statistics has another official unemployment rate known as U.6.
The difference
is that U.3 does not include discouraged workers who are not currently actively
seeking a job. (A discouraged worker is a person who has given up looking for a
job because there are no jobs to be found.) The U.6 measure includes workers
who have been discouraged for less than one year. The U.6 rate of unemployment
is 14.4%, about double the headline rate.
The U.6 rate
does not include long-term discouraged workers, those who have been discouraged
for more than one year. John Williams estimates this rate and reports the
actual rate of unemployment (known as SGS) in November to be 22.9%.
In other words,
the headline rate of unemployment is one-third the actual rate.
The drop in the
November headline rate of unemployment from 7.9 to 7.7 is due to a 20.4%
increase in the number of short-term discouraged workers in November. In other
words, unemployed people rolled out of the U.3 measure into the U.6 measure.
Similarly, a
number of short-term discouraged workers roll out of the U.6 measure into John
Williams’ measure that includes all of the unemployed. Williams reports that
“with the continual rollover, the flow of headline workers continues into the
short-term discouraged workers (U.6), and from U.6 into long term discouraged
worker status (a ShadowStats.com measure), at what has been an accelerating
pace. The aggregate November data show an increasing rate of individuals
dropping out of the headline (U.3) labor force.” In other words, the headline
rate of unemployment can drop even though the unemployed are having a harder
time finding jobs.
The U.S.
government simply lowers the unemployment rate by not counting all of the
unemployed. We owe this innovation to the Clinton administration. In 1994 the
Clinton administration redefined “discouraged workers” and limited this group
to those who are discouraged for less than one year. Those discouraged for more
than one year are no longer considered to be in the labor force and ceased to
be counted as unemployed.
If the U.S.
government will mislead the public about unemployment, it will also mislead about
Syria, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Somalia, Pakistan, Yemen, Lebanon,
Palestine, Russia, China, and 9/11. The government fits its story to its
agenda.
A government
that wants to cut the social safety net doesn’t want you to know that the
unemployment rate is 22.9%. A government that wants to cut the social safety
net when between one-fifth and one-fourth of the work force is out of work
looks hard-hearted, mean-spirited, and foolish. But if the government reports
only one-third of the unemployed and presents that rate as falling, then the
government can present its cuts as prudent to avoid falling over a “fiscal
cliff.”
If the “free and
democratic” Americans cannot even find out what the unemployment rate is, how
do they expect to find out about anything?