Here is our usual chart comparing the seasonally adjusted and actual payroll numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Two things are worth noting.
The first is that the recent uptrend in the seasonally adjusted 'headline' number is conspicuously at odds with the actual numbers, which are still in the same downtrend.
The second is the usual observation we make, and that is to remind people that the adjustments that are made to the actual numbers for seasonality are enormous, and subject to significant revisions after the fact.
About 220,000 of those jobs in the actual number are due to the birth death model 'plug' which is a real howler when you look at the specifics that the BLS attributes growth in the new / small business segement of the economy.
We will get a little more optimistic when the longer term trend turns higher. Granted, it will miss the bottom by a few months, but it is an important signal to confirm any uptrend in the economy that seems to be highly reliable.
The level of unemployment is still a major impediment to the economy despite hopes for a bottom to the economic contraction. Economists will say that this is a lagging indicator, and we will say yes, but we would say that it is the standard by which a bottom will be judged.
Our take on these numbers is that they are at best a short term uptick in response to historically unprecedented monetary stimulus and at worst a false recovery fueled by dangerous levels of monetization and some disappointing short term statistical razzle dazzle.
05 June 2009
Non-Farm Payrolls Trend Mismatch
Category:
Government Statistics,
Non-farm Payrolls