January Unemployment: Are we there yet?

Today’s unemployment report for the month of January was revealing for what it did not tell us. That is, are we about to turn the corner on unemployment ?  The report showed a modest 20,000 loss in jobs in the month of January,  a virtual flat performance with the month of December, 2009. Of more note was a .3% drop in the stated unemployment rate from 10% to 9.7%, the lowest rate since last summer. However, as we commented in our blog article, “November Unemployment: Is this the Peak?“, December 4, 2009, the Labor Department made annual revisions to its monthly employment reports. As expected, the revisions show more job losses in 2009 than previously reported. According to the revised calculations, the economy lost over 600,000 more jobs in calendar 2009 than previously reported including a large downward revision of 65,000 lost jobs in the month of December, 2009 to a revised total of 150,000 lost jobs in that month. So a flat January job loss result with December is not a job improvement. We therefore are skeptical of the drop in the unemployment rate. In addition, the average workweek in January remains depressed at 33.9 hours and the civilian labor force participation rate in January continued to reflect historical lows below 65%. There are other important items in the January employment report. Goods producing industries, largely in construction, lost another 60,000 jobs bringing the total for the last three months to almost 150,000. Financial activities and transportation and warehousing sectors lost another 35,000 jobs in January on top of the almost 29,000 jobs lost in December. These are generally high wage jobs.  Finally, long term unemployed, those out of work 27 weeks and longer, continue to rise to a record 6.3 million in January. This is the chronic problem in the unemployment picture. While new job losses continue to diminish, continuing job losses continue to rise.  The increasing universe of long term unemployed will continue to suppress consumer spending and therefore an acceleration in the economic recovery.

The January unemployment report did contain some positives. The number of temporary help workers increased by another 50,000 in January and since September by nearly 250,000. While this number is being augmented by hiring for the U.S. Census this year, the recent five month trend augurs well for ultimate permanent job creation later this year. For the first time since the recession began, manufacturing added jobs in January, albeit a small number (11,000), but it is significant and supports the economic improvement in the factory sector which we noted in our recent “Economic and Capital Market Update“, February 1, 2010 on our website. We expect further improvement in manufacturing employment reflecting the upside momentum in factory orders, particularly in the technology sector.

All in all, the January monthly unemployment report while encouraging is still not conclusive evidence of a transition to meaningful job creation in the current economic recovery.

Morris R. Segall, CFA, CIC

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