Jobs: The Household Survey Tells a Different Story

SchiffGold US Debt Employment

Headline number continues to defy logic

Exploring Finance https://exploringfinance.github.io/
06-04-2023

This article first appeared on SchiffGold.

The BLS reported that a whopping 339k jobs were added in May. This crushed median estimates of 190k jobs added. The Household Survey tells a very different story though, reporting a loss of 310k.

Figure 1: Primary Report vs Household Survey - Monthly

As the chart above shows, the Household Survey exceeded the Headline Report in December, January, and March. This followed an extended period of coming in way below the Headline Report. Due to the big gap this month of more than 600k jobs, the Household Survey has fallen below the Headline Report YTD 1.47m vs 1.57m. Keep in mind, the Household Survey is still averaging 294k jobs a month which is quite strong.

Figure 2: Primary Report vs Household Survey - Annual

There is another report published by the BLS called the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QECW). According to the BLS, this is a far more accurate and rigorous report covering 95% of jobs available at a highly detailed level. Due to the rigor, the report is released quarterly on a 7 month lag. The latest report was published at the end of February to show Q3 2022.

Below are the monthly numbers. Similar to what we saw with the Household report, the QECW has caught up in a big way to the Headline number. In fact, going back 24 months shows that the most recent release had the largest deviation from the Headline number in all three months.

Figure 3: Primary Report vs QCEW - Yearly

The overperformance in August and September shown above has brought the QECW in line with the Headline number on an annual basis (Jan - Sep is shown for 2022). The QECW is now 92% of the Headline number.

Figure 4: Primary Report vs QCEW - Yearly

The BLS also publishes the data behind their Birth/Death assumptions. These are the jobs that the BLS assumes based on companies starting or closing. While the data is not seasonally adjusted, it directly impacts the Headline Report. The chart below shows the impact of Birth/Death jobs on the total raw number for the last several months.

May had Birth/Deaths responsible for 25% of total jobs. While this falls short of the 40% in April, it is still quite an elevated number. Given the economic uncertainty, it’s hard to believe that enough new businesses formed in May to employ 230k people.

Figure 5: Primary Unadjusted Report With Birth Death Assumptions - Monthly

YTD the Birth/Death assumptions have been responsible for the vast majority of jobs. 612k jobs have come from birth/death assumptions, with 350k coming from the base report.

Figure 6: Primary Unadjusted Report With Birth Death Assumptions - Annual

Digging Into the Report

The 339k jobs surprised to the upside, but the unemployment rate surged from 3.4% to 3.7%. The surge happened even though the labor force participation stayed flat at 62.6%. This is another data point that doesn’t jive with the base Headline Report.

Figure 7: Change by sector

Jobs by Category

With the unexpectedly strong report, 5 of the 8 employment categories were actually above the 12-month trend. Education and Health continue to be the standout categories.

Figure 8: Current vs TTM

The table below shows a detailed breakdown of the numbers.

Key takeaways:

Monthly Average Change

Total % Change

Category

Total Employed

Current Month

3 Months

12 Months

3 years

Current Month

3 Months

12 Months

3 years

Private Sector

Construction

8,056

17

16.7

16.4

19.5

0.2%

0.6%

2.4%

8.7%

Education Health

25,878

74

89.0

87.6

70.3

0.3%

1.0%

4.1%

9.8%

Financial

9,148

2

-1.7

3.9

11.9

0.0%

-0.1%

0.5%

4.7%

Information

3,051

14

5.7

-5.8

9.3

0.5%

0.6%

-2.3%

11.0%

Leisure Hospitality

16,782

40

25.7

38.8

111.2

0.2%

0.5%

2.8%

23.8%

Manufacturing

12,986

6

-2.0

1.0

21.9

0.0%

0.0%

0.1%

6.1%

Mining and Logging

641

-1

-1.3

1.1

2.3

-0.2%

-0.6%

2.0%

13.1%

Other Services

5,895

-1

2.3

8.1

16.2

0.0%

0.1%

1.6%

9.9%

Prof Business

22,946

13

-10.7

11.0

62.1

0.1%

-0.1%

0.6%

9.7%

Trade Trans Utils

28,846

0

-9.0

6.6

48.2

0.0%

-0.1%

0.3%

6.0%

Government

Government Federal

2,965

7

5.3

7.6

1.9

0.2%

0.5%

3.1%

2.4%

Government Local

14,712

37

32.0

28.5

28.2

0.3%

0.7%

2.3%

6.9%

Government State

5,326

8

12.7

19.9

6.8

0.2%

0.7%

4.5%

4.6%

Total

All

157,232

216

164.7

224.8

409.9

0.1%

0.3%

1.7%

9.4%

Values in 1,000s of workers. Data as of: Dec 2023. Total Employed = Entire size of the labor market.

Revisions

Another data point to highlight is the amount of revisions. From Feb-April, the BLS has revised total jobs down by 13.7k per month.

3 Month Compare

12 Month Compare

3 Year Compare

Category

Current

As Of Published

Avg Month Diff

Current

As Of Published

Avg Month Diff

Current

As Of Published

Avg Month Diff

Private Sector

Construction

42

42

0.0

206

197

0.8

722

584

3.8

Education Health

279

262

5.7

1,048

1,025

1.9

2,455

2,443

0.3

Financial

-7

4

-3.7

49

77

-2.3

438

343

2.6

Information

-3

15

-6.0

-92

-49

-3.6

335

225

3.1

Leisure Hospitality

113

99

4.7

484

657

-14.4

3,453

3,962

-14.1

Manufacturing

-1

-1

0.0

12

60

-4.0

821

668

4.2

Mining and Logging

-2

-1

-0.3

18

13

0.4

88

124

-1.0

Other Services

16

10

2.0

111

117

-0.5

554

570

-0.4

Prof Business

-62

19

-27.0

142

345

-16.9

2,380

1,741

17.8

Trade Trans Utils

4

-36

13.3

115

144

-2.4

1,757

1,247

14.2

Government

Government Federal

14

10

1.3

85

64

1.8

69

55

0.4

Government Local

90

107

-5.7

340

334

0.5

957

898

1.6

Government State

57

35

7.3

202

156

3.8

244

230

0.4

Total

All

540

565

-8.3

2,720

3,140

-35.0

14,273

13,090

32.9

Values in 1,000s of workers. Because this data is focused on revisions, it is as of the month prior: Nov 2023. "Current" shows the change in employment after revisions. "As Of Published" shows change in employment at time of release. "Avg Month Diff" shows the average monthly change from the revisions.

Historical Perspective

The chart below shows data going back to 1955. As shown, the economy is currently “enjoying” its lowest unemployment rate on record. This is quite hard to believe given the current economic environment and job losses that have been announced and implemented.

Figure 9: Historical Labor Market

The labor force participation rate has reached a post pandemic high of 62.6% but sits below the 63.3% in Feb 2020 and well below the 66% from before the Financial Crisis. This was the second month in a row where the labor force printed at 62.6%.

Figure 10: Labor Market Distribution

Wrapping Up

The BLS continues to issue jobs reports that defy reality and expectations. Last month, the jobs report broke a record as having been the 13th consecutive job report where the market underestimated the numbers. This means that for the 14th month in a row, the jobs report has surprised to the upside. How is that possible? How much stock can we put in these numbers?

When the Fed’s “inflation is transitory” narrative fell apart, the Fed did a pivot and leaned hard into the jobs numbers. They say that the strong job market is evidence of a resilient economy. They are betting everything on the strong jobs report. What happens if the numbers turn out to be wrong? Or what if the jobs numbers finally reflect the rest of the economic numbers that continue to underwhelm?

If the Fed is living by the jobs numbers they could die by the jobs numbers. More likely though, something will break before the jobs data reflects a collapsing economy. That’s when the Fed will rush to step in with liquidity. They already did it on a small scale with SVB. Expect the next one to be much bigger!


Data Source: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PAYEMS and also series CIVPART

Data Updated: Monthly on first Friday of the month

Last Updated: Dec 2023

Interactive charts and graphs can always be found on the Exploring Finance dashboard: https://exploringfinance.shinyapps.io/USDebt/