Average Work Week Has Peaked and Total Aggregate Hours Is Rolling Over

Data from BLS, chart by Mish 

The blue line is the average hours worked for all private workers. The red line is average weekly hours of production and nonsupervisory workers.

Index of Aggregate Hours 

Chart Notes

  • Once again the blue line is total private while red is production and nonsupervisory. 
  • These are index levels not total hours worked. 
  • Production, a subset of total private, does not have more hours worked. 

Index of Aggregate Hours Definition

Indexes of aggregate weekly hours are calculated by dividing the current month’s aggregate hours by the average of the 12 monthly figures, for the base year. For basic industries, the hours aggregates are the product of average weekly hours and employment of workers to which the hours apply (all employees or production and nonsupervisory employees). At all higher levels of industry aggregation, hours aggregates are the sum of the component aggregates.

Both of the above series come from the establishment survey. 

Household Survey vs. Payroll Survey

  • The payroll survey (sometimes called the establishment survey) is the headline jobs number. It is based on employer reporting.
  • The household survey is a phone survey conducted by the BLS. It measures employment, unemployment and other factors.

Calculating Total Hours Worked

Although the average work week is has declined steeply, total hours worked has been rising until recently. The numbers are all seasonally adjusted so we can can compare months. 

I multiplied average hours by total nonfarm for one set of numbers and production hours by the number of production and supervisory workers for a second set of numbers. 

October was the peak month for all private workers. September was the peak month for production and nonsupervisory workers.

Total Hours All Private 

  • October: 5,287,608,000 Hours
  • December: 5,273,385,000 Hours

Total Hours Production and Nonsupervisory

  • September: 3,620,966,000 Hours
  • December: 3,613,490,000 Hours

I have not studied this data to know how noisy it is. Also, there could be significant rounding errors. However, all the charts and my calculations are in sync. 

The indexes of aggregate hours appear to be rolling over and my calculation suggests the same.

Meanwhile, assuming you have faith in these payroll numbers the numbers of jobs keeps rising. 

December Jobs: Employment Rises by 717,000 All of Them Part Time

Payroll and employment data from the BLS, chart by Mish

For discussion of the latest jobs report, please see December Jobs: Employment Rises by 717,000 All of Them Part Time

Nonfarm jobs rose by 223,000 and employment jumped but huge divergences continue for the 9th month.

Payrolls vs Employment Since March 2022

  • Nonfarm Payrolls: +2,887,000
  • Employment Level: +916,000
  • Full Time Employment: -288,000

Full time employment is down 288,000 since March and down by 444,000 since May!

Declining hours from the establishment survey fits in nicely with trends in the employment levels.

I strongly believe we will see major revisions to the downside in some of this data. It happens at every economic turn.

This post originated on MishTalk.Com.

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8dots
8dots
1 year ago
No recession even if SPX make a round trip to Feb 2020, to make bond traders happy, before popping up. The big wave down might come later. Then, bond traders will make real money.
8dots
8dots
1 year ago
Production : total hour down 0.6 hours from 34.4 in Jan 2021 to 33.8, down 1.7% in 2Y. For all private workers : down 0.7 hours, or minus (-)2%, while inflation was raging. Productivity in Q4 2020 was minus (-)3.9%, in Q3 2022 0.8%. No recession.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
1 year ago
Reply to  8dots
No recession, eh?
On January 3rd you said treasury yields heading higher. 10yr yield closed @ 3.88%.
Currently 3.57%.
Not that I keep track of musings here …
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
1 year ago
Yowser on today’s eia petroleum report.
crude oil inventory
prior week … +1.694 million barrels
expected … -2.243 million barrels
actual … +18.962 million barrels
gasoline inventory build more than 3x expected.
No blizzard last week for bullz to blame …
Zardoz
Zardoz
1 year ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
Just the po’ folk stayin’ they a$$es home
Christoball
Christoball
1 year ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
The world is swimming in oil just like it is sparkling with diamonds. Neither are scarce.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
1 year ago
“I strongly believe we will see major revisions to the downside in some of this data. It happens at every economic turn.”
Absolutely. And why NBER will never be able to call onset of recession in real time. Anyone here calling “no recession” due to some current indicator either clueless or hasn’t been around long enough to understand how significant revisions can be (an example, Philadelphia federal reserve bank just eliminated a million jobs in 2022.)
davebarnes2
davebarnes2
1 year ago
At ZERO hours per week, proudly lowering the mean and median.
Directed Energy
Directed Energy
1 year ago
40 hours a week is kinda part time work. I don’t get anything done or make any money at 40 hours. 50 a week seems to be critical mass.
KidHorn
KidHorn
1 year ago
First they eliminate overtime and then they eliminate jobs.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
1 year ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Yes … after independent contractors terminated.
Earnings will rule hiring / firing. CY2023 earnings beginning to be lowered … nowhere near what actuality will bring.
“While analysts were decreasing EPS estimates in aggregate for the fourth quarter, they were also decreasing EPS estimates in aggregate for CY 2023. The bottom-up EPS estimate for CY 2023 declined by 4.4% (to $230.51 from $241.20) from September 30 to December 31.”

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