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Jobs Rise by 253,000 and the Unemployment Rate Dips to 3.4 Percent in April

Nonfarm payrolls and employment levels from the BLS, chart by Mish.

Today, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its Monthly Payroll Report.

Initial Thoughts

  • The divergence between jobs and employment continues for nearly a full year but has decreased in 2023.
  • Because of annual benchmark revisions, the way the BLS reports revisions, and the relatively small sample sizes of monthly jobs reports, we cannot, with strong confidence, suggest these reports portray an accurate picture of either jobs or employment.

Payrolls vs Employment Since May 2022

  • Nonfarm Payrolls: +3,631,000
  • Employment Level: +2,732,000
  • Full Time Employment: +1,757,000

Of the 894,000 rise in employment in January, 810,000 was due to annual benchmark revisions. And the BLS does not say what months were revised, just poof, here you go.

Household Survey Revision Synopsis

In accordance with usual practice, BLS will not revise the official household survey estimates for December 2022 and earlier months. Data users are cautioned that these annual population adjustments can affect the comparability of household data series over time.”

In essence, the BLS admits all of its job reports are full of errors and it leaves the errors in place as discussed as per its stated methodology.

No matter how you slice the revisions, full time employment has been very weak.

With BLS admitted errors out of the way, let’s discuss the current data.

Job Report Details

  • Nonfarm Payroll: +253,000 to 155,673 – Establishment Survey
  • Civilian Non-institutional Population: +171,000 to 266,443,000
  • Civilian Labor Force: -43,000 to 166,688,000 – Household Survey
  • Participation Rate: +0.0 to 62.6% – Household Survey
  • Employment: +139,000 to 161,031,000 Household Survey
  • Unemployment: -182,000 to 5,657,000- Household Survey
  • Baseline Unemployment Rate: -0.1 to 3.4% – Household Survey
  • Not in Labor Force: +214,000 to 99,755,000 – Household Survey
  • U-6 unemployment: -0.1 to 6.6% – Household Survey

Change in Nonfarm Payrolls

Change in Nonfarm Payrolls Details

  • Leisure and Hospitality: +31,000 after rising 72,000 in March
  • Education and Health Service: +77,000
  • Government: +23,000
  • Manufacturing has peaked this cycle and has mostly been flat all year. In April, manufacturing was up 11,000.
  • Construction: +15,000 after falling 9,000 in March
  • Retail Trade: was +8,000 after falling 15,000 in March

Monthly Revisions

The change in total nonfarm payroll employment for February was revised down by 78,000, from +326,000 to +248,000, and the change for March was revised down by 71,000, from +236,000 to +165,000. With these revisions, employment in February and March combined is 149,000 lower than previously reported. 

Part-Time Jobs

The above numbers never total correctly due to the way the BLS makes seasonal adjustments. I list them as reported.

Hours and Wages

This data is frequently revised. 

  • Average weekly hours of all private employees was unchanged at 34.5 hours.
  • Average weekly hours of all private service-providing employees rose 0.1 hours to 33.4 hours.
  • Average weekly hours of manufacturers fell 0.1 hours to 40.2 hours.

An overall decline or rise of a tenth of an hour does not sound line much, but with employment at 160 million, it’s more significant than it appears at first glance.

Hourly Earnings

This data is also frequently revised. Here are the numbers as reported this month.

Average Hourly Earnings of All Nonfarm Workers rose $0.16 to $33.36. A year ago the average wage was $31.94. That’s a gain of 4.4%.

Average hourly earnings of Production and Nonsupervisory Workers rose $0.11 to $28.62. A year ago the average wage was $27.27. That’s a gain of 5.0%.

Despite the gains, wages have not kept up with inflation.

Unemployment Rate

The unemployment rate hit a 50-year low in January of 3.4 percent. This month it’s back to 3.4 percent.

The civilian noninstitutional population is 266,443,000. Employment is 161,031,000. That means there are over 105 million people age 16 and older who are not working at all.

Alternative Measures of Unemployment

Table A-15 is where one can find a better approximation of what the unemployment rate really is.

The official unemployment rate is 3.4%.

U-6 is much higher at 6.6%. Both numbers would be way higher still, were it not for millions dropping out of the labor force over the past few years.

Some of those dropping out of the labor force retired because they wanted to retire. Some dropped out over Covid fears and never returned. Still others took advantage of a strong stock market and retired early.

The rest is disability fraud, forced retirement (need for Social Security income), and discouraged workers.

Birth Death Model

Starting January 2014, I dropped the Birth/Death Model charts from this report.

The birth-death model pertains to the birth and death of corporations not individuals except by implication.

For those who follow the numbers, I retain this caution: Do not subtract the reported Birth-Death number from the reported headline number. That approach is statistically invalid.

The model is wrong at economic turning points and is also heavily revised and thus essentially useless.

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.

If you work one hour, you are employed. If you don’t have a job and fail to look for one, you are not considered unemployed, rather, you drop out of the labor force.

Looking for job openings on Jooble or Monster or in the want ads does not count as “looking for a job”. You need an actual interview or send out a resume.

These distortions artificially lower the unemployment rate, artificially boost full-time employment, and artificially increase the payroll jobs report every month.

Expect a Long But Shallow Recession With Minimal Rise in Unemployment

Given hiring pressures and boomer retirements, Expect a Long But Shallow Recession With Minimal Unemployment Rise

Unlike many others, I expect the unemployment rate will not rise much in this recession compared to the average recession impact. Employment due to baby boomer retirement is another matter.

Demographically Sobering Thoughts on US Employment in the Next Five Years

In case you missed it, please see Demographically Sobering Thoughts on US Employment in the Next Five Years

This post originated at MishTalk.Com

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51 Comments
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JMOD46
JMOD46
3 years ago
Related:
“In 2021, you needed a 1099 if you paid someone $20K. Now it’s $600 … All these gig workers are suddenly being forced to apply for jobs, and the BLS is interpreting this as record entrepreneurship and business formation.”
Casual_Observer2020
Casual_Observer2020
3 years ago
We live in interesting times.
ColoradoAccountant
ColoradoAccountant
3 years ago
Unemployment has been a long running problem until 2020, now we cannot find workers. Federal debt grows because Congress doesn’t understand the difference between productive debt (seeds for this year’s planting), and non-productive debt (bombs for Ukraine).
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
SPX weekly log, for fun and entertainment, on Stockcharts.com :
L1 : Mar 23 2020 low to Oct 10 2022 Close. // L2 : Parallel from Mar 23 2020 high. // L3 : Parallel from Dec 24 2018 Low.
L4 : Parallel from Dec 24 2018 high. // L5 : Parallel from Jan 13 2020 and Feb 10 2020 highs.
SPX might osc between L1 and and L5. SPX might rise < L1. It’s a warning sign, but might not lead to an imminent collapse. If SPX cut
through L1 and test of L1 from below, watch out
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  8dots
youtuber “game of trades” does excellent chart analysis using a broad spectrum of charts with multiple indicators over various time sets.
ohno
ohno
3 years ago
I put my 84 hours in last week. Im taking this sat off and only putting in 72 im being a slacker. But then I work straight to the 18th which is a 4 day weekend.
I personally like our schedule, its 4 12’s with 3 day weekends but since for many reasons stated on this site we can’t get help so weekends are always available if you want them. I’ve never worked this much before but then i’ve never made so much either.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  ohno
I work straight to the 18th myself.
Then I have a drink or two at the 19th and maybe a light bite to eat.
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
Are you moonlighting as a caddy at an exclusive golf club?
dtj
dtj
3 years ago
This doesn’t count huge parts of the economy. People working under the table. The $200 billion+ illegal drug trade. Illegal aliens working for cash. Criminals sawing off catalytic converters (not a job in the traditional sense, but it pays the bills). Tens of millions are not counted.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  dtj
i don’t get people believing BLS for recession calls, when their numbers are idiotic. shadow stats has the best handle on all this as they try as silly as it is, to score unemployment to old standards. i still don’t know anyone who does not have a job, that wants one. i know plenty of young fellas and gals with 2 jobs. mish has been dead wrong on inflation and recession. it’s roaring inflation with lots of jobs…………….stagflation is the closest word for it. i really don’t even know what the term recession means. besides my neighbor losing her job or house.
oee
oee
3 years ago
Where is your recession? There is no universe in which there is a recession and 1 million plus jobs are created in 4 months.
Where are the robots taking over? In fact, you admitted productivity has ..gone down for the last year! Productivity went up 3% from 1947 to 1973!
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  oee
Wasn’t there a recession last year?
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
No. Not in the US.
Here are the last few:
The COVID-19 Recession: February 2020–April 2020
Duration: Two months
The Great Recession: December 2007–June 2009
Duration: Eighteen months
The Dot-Bomb Recession: March 2001–November 2001
Duration: Eight months
The Gulf War Recession: July 1990–March 1991
Duration: Eight months
worleyeoe
worleyeoe
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
My guess is you’re being sarcastic, but as we all know, there was a “nobody’s buying inventory” induced pseudo recession during part of Q1 to Q2. The same thing happened in the 1st Qtr of this year with GDP nose diving from 2.5% down to 1.1%.
Nothing official from the NBER.
Jackula
Jackula
3 years ago
Who woulda thought? Raising interest rates seem to helping the real economy and flushing out the weak hands of the gamblers and rentiers. Jay Powell will be forced to raise interest rates more to keep labor costs in check. What we need is to relax the immigration laws to bring more young motivated workers here. Providing these numbers are actually accurate as Mish points out.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
The civilian noninstitutional population is 266,443,000. Employment is 161,031,000. That means there are over 105 million people age 16 and older who are not working at all.
Would be great to see some analytical projections on what the numbers might be in 2030 from your analytical point of view. I already have my numbers but would like to see independent verification if anyone is up to it. here’s a hint: 40 million boomers reach age 65 or older by 2030.
Mish
Mish
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  Mish
Yes, and grateful for that but the real crux is 2030 thru 2040. My forecasts show a possible repeat of the great depression of 1929 in certain scenarios and far worse in others. Of course, it’s all for fun and entertainment only.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
Jay Powell (with foot to the pedal): Any questions?
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
How steep is the cliff?
Dr Funkenstein
Dr Funkenstein
3 years ago
The next time I get approached by a pan handler asking for money, I’ll tell him that unemployment is at a 50 year low.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  Dr Funkenstein
As well as drug prices.
Nuddernoitall
Nuddernoitall
3 years ago
To paraphrase Mark Twain, reports of … the impending slow-as-molasses mother-of-all recessions … has been greatly exaggerated.
No amount of Twitter chatterers, MSNBC “experts”, Gold safe-haven prophets and “I have been right twice” broken clock pundits have woken up to the new day when the proper laxative has finally been set into motion —and the economy is in the throws of its long-awaited nearly fatal dump.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  Nuddernoitall
I guess the Biden miracle economy is running on all eight (woke) cylinders. Can’t be mad at the crazy old coot for keeping everything humming along.
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
So I’m guessing you define ‘woke’ as ‘acknowledges the existence of institutional racism’.
How does that effect the economy?
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
Don’t really know, I just want to profit from wokeism and/or un-wokeism. The story with Bud Light was a great opportunity to sell naked puts on Bud as the reactions created volatility. The same true with green energy and bashing oil. Sell calls on rallies and sell naked puts on bearish drops and profit..profit..profit….
I’ll take money from anyone and everyone and laugh all the way to the bank. The right question isn’t “How does that effect the economy?” it’s “How do I profit from this situation?”
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
You’re making financial decisions based on a word you can’t define?
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
The latest Supreme Court Justice got there on a word she couldn’t define.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
I am making profits from action and reaction (volatility).
In essence that’s everything that happens in the universe. A beam of light allows a plant to grow. Plant gets eaten by a bug. Bug gets eaten by a frog. Frog gets eaten by alligator. Alligator gets eaten by human. Human signs deal with trans person to advertise bud light and other humans overreact and create volatility impacting Bud stock. I position myself for profits then profit and laugh at it all then go eat a salad and prevent the chain of exploitation as best as I can from repeating.
Rinse and repeat.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
I thought it was systemic racism.
threeblindmice
threeblindmice
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
I think “woke” means: 1. views all human relations as interactions between oppressor and oppressed groups of people, 2. assuming any statistical difference between groups of people is evidence of discrimination created and perpetuated by institutions great and small for the benefit of the oppressor classes, 3. asking for evidence of discrimination in any particular case is, in itself, evidence of the existence of systemic racism, the elevation of subjective feelings over evidence and reason. Is that approximately correct?
The way it affects the economy is by poisoning interactions between people of identifiable groups, by denigrating the concept of the individual in favor of group identity which undermines concepts of justice and fairness, by extension, replacing the rewarding of individual merit with abstract concepts of group entitlement, by undermining logic and reason in favor of “lived experience” and standpoint epistemology, among other illiberal and destructive notions. Thanks for asking.
worleyeoe
worleyeoe
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
Woke “believes” there’s institutional racism. Just because you believe something doesn’t make it true.
The damage being done to this country raising young blacks to hate white people because they’re racist is just mind boggling.
You’ve got blacks running around thinking they can’t be racist because they’re the minority. People these days are too blinded by skin color hate to even understand what real racism looks & feels like.
This belief in wokeness is pushing the US towards a civil war with the initial phase being rapidly increasing crime, especially black on white. It’s getting so bad that the FBI is changing the way they collect and report crime data.
5-7 short years has undone decades of advancements in racial harmony.
Nuddernoitall
Nuddernoitall
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
He doesn’t even know what day it is.
Fortunately for him, and his many handlers, the act of breathing is automatic, involuntary and continuous. Biden doesn’t have to consciously think about it. Sort of like everything else in his life.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
“Because of annual benchmark revisions, the way the BLS reports revisions, and the relatively small sample sizes of monthly jobs reports, we cannot, with strong confidence, suggest these reports portray an accurate picture of either jobs or employment.”
Thank you.
Two things.
1) Survey response rate steadily dropping.
“Each month, CES surveys approximately 122,000 businesses and government agencies, representing approximately 666,000 individual worksites.”
response rate January 2020 … 60.0%
response rate December 2022 … 43.9%
2) The job numbers may well be legit, but then jobs gained have to part time and / or low paying … while well paying jobs exiting … to jibe with withheld taxes.
FY2022 thru May 3rd … $1.954 trillion withheld.
FY2023 thru May 3rd … $1.939 trillion withheld
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
Please, Tony, my mind is made up.
Don’t confuse me with facts.
MikeC711
MikeC711
3 years ago
I hope you are right about a light recession. As a small real estate investor … I need my tenants to stay employed and no more of the chicanery where tenants need not pay rent.
RunnerDan
RunnerDan
3 years ago
Reply to  MikeC711
Exactly!!! Ain’t no business like getting rich off the poor. Easy pickins!
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  RunnerDan
Ever try to exploit a rich person? It ain’t easy… until the second or third generation anyhow.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
Second and especially third generation exploiters are typically working through first generation sub-exploiters.
msspec
msspec
3 years ago
Reply to  RunnerDan
“Exactly!!! Ain’t no business like getting rich off the poor. Easy pickins!”
Are you asserting that tenants by definition are poor, or as a demographic class?
hmk
hmk
3 years ago
Reply to  RunnerDan
Exactly, they should confiscate those houses and give them to the tenants. I think the term for that is communism. I love your virtue signaling how WOKE of you.
Casual_Observer2020
Casual_Observer2020
3 years ago
I’ve said it before. Unless unemployment rises appreciably, there will be no recession but just growth around 1-2%. This jobs number gives the Fed room to keep hiking.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
“I’ve said it before.”
Yes, you have.
You have also said we’re in dire straits … many times.
Make up your mind.
Matt3
Matt3
3 years ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
I’m sticking with stagflation and expect wages to continue to increase less than inflation. A slow bleed of the middle class.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
Reply to  Matt3
I’m – surprise surprise – in the hard recession camp. Time will tell.
Anyway, no one should put much stock in this report (as recession or not indicator). Employment a lagging indicator. And with the difficulty business has had attracting it the past few years it will prove even laggier as employers won’t cave till they see the whites of recession eyes.
For the most part only tech has had layoffs so far … as they let go their “bullpen” employees … everyone else in wait and see mode.
But repeated declines in productivity and increase in initial claims “may” be a tell where employment headed.
TechLover
TechLover
3 years ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
Employment is indeed a lagging indicator.
As Mish has said before, quits rate is a decent forward looking indicator.
I am also in a hard recession camp now. But it will take time. Give it another year.
Casual_Observer2020
Casual_Observer2020
3 years ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
Why can’t it be both ? We live in a bifurcated world. Much like the universe things are always chaotic.
shamrock
shamrock
3 years ago
It’s been a bad week for the recession. Light vehicle sales up, heavy truck sales way up, 23% year over year, historically high. ISM Services stronger than expected. Trade deficit way down, GDPNow soars to 2.7%. And now this employment report.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  shamrock
Time cover June 13, 2005 – Everyone was praising their genius investments in real estate because prices only go up….
We all know what happened three years later. I’d say we are in May 2007 right now.
shamrock
shamrock
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
For what assets?
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  shamrock
All of them: stocks in bubble, real estate in a bubble (but deflating), dotcom bubble, bitcoin bubble and bond bubble. Burry is expecting the mother of all crashes and I agree, question is when. I have put positions for January 2024 myself so I have 8 months to birth profits.
Real estate will take years to correct though but real estate stocks will take the hit faster and sooner than later.

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