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Workers’ Leverage for Wage and Benefit Increases Is Nearly Back to Normal

Seasonally adjusted data from the BLS, calculations by Mish

Tweet of the Day

Labor Market Tightness

Here’s my correction to the above Tweet: “I’ve started following the Labor Leverage Ratio (ratio of quits to firings). I feel like that is a very good proxy for the tightness of the labor market.

That caught my attention. The ratio is actually quits to layoffs and discharges, a slight correction.  The Tweet linked to the article The Labor Leverage Ratio: A New Measure That Signals a Worker-Driven Recovery by Aaron Sojourner and Emily DiVito.

The article is from February 4, 2022 and is more than a bit stale. At the time, the Labor Leverage ratio was at a record high. 

The American labor market is experiencing a Great Upgrade. Workers are quitting jobs at record rates to take better jobs elsewhere, and layoffs are at a record low. To understand what this means for workers, we calculate what Sojourner has coined the Labor Leverage Ratio (LLR): the number of quits initiated by workers compared to discharges, including firings or permanent layoffs initiated by employers. 

The greater worker bargaining power signaled by a higher LLR is one of the silver linings of an otherwise long, devastating pandemic. COVID upended established workplace norms, raised serious concerns about worker health and safety and employer profitability, and changed the circumstances of many workers’ lives. Employers reacted with big changes to workplace procedures such that many previously satisfied employees find themselves working under conditions they never expected. Individual workers and organized labor responded accordingly, demanding better working conditions and higher pay. And many worker and labor groups are using the pandemic as a catalyst for more aggressive collective action.

The key ratio is quits to layoffs and discharges, including firings or permanent layoffs initiated by employers. 

Lead Chart Notes

  • Data for this series dates only to December of 2000. 
  • Total Nonfarm and Total Private produce similar results. Those series’ are seasonally adjusted. 
  • The current data, March of 2023, is nearly back to pre-pandemic norms but is somewhat above the 2008 and 2001 recession. 

The idea is somewhat flawed in regards to specific sectors, but I like the overall idea. 

The key problem for sectors is the extremely cyclical nature of the data. Although seasonally-adjusted data is available for total nonfarm and total private, layoff data is not seasonally adjusted. 

Labor Leverage Ratios Select Industries 

Unadjusted data from the BLS, calculations by Mish

The cyclical nature is obvious, and that’s a problem. By sector, seasonally-adjusted data is available for quits but not layoffs. 

In the above chart, I used unadjusted data for both series’. A mixture increased the amplitude. 

Labor Leverage Ratios Select Details 

Unadjusted data from the BLS, calculations by Mish

Labor Leverage Ratios Select Services and Month 

Unadjusted data from the BLS, calculations by Mish

Seasonal Adjustment Madness

The leverage ratios for the retail trade and education sectors are surely wrong. There is no realistic way leverage is increasing for retail trade given all the bankruptcies and mass layoffs.

A quick look at the data shows the leverage is 4.88 now but 2.31 in January. This is seasonal adjustment madness.

There are 70 Major Bankruptcies in Just 4 Months This Year

Please note There are 70 Major Bankruptcies in Just 4 Months This Year

For 2009 there were 118 bankruptcies through April. In Covid-impacted 2020, there were 71 bankruptcies. In 2023 there have been 70.

This is the third worst start to the year since 2000. 

Falling Leverage

Workers’ leverage is undoubtedly slowing.

There is falling consumer sentiment, falling retail sales, and increasing recession fears. Key businesses are laying off workers and bankruptcies are on the rise.

Job Openings Dive But Quits Tell a Better Story of the Weakening Job Market

On May 2, I commented Job Openings Dive But Quits Tell a Better Story of the Weakening Job Market

Job openings have dropped by over 2 million from the peak but are still at an elevated level. Voluntary quits tell a better story of the strength of the market.

Quits have peaked everywhere.

With layoffs jumping in the leisure and hospitality, construction, and health care sectors, the odds of a Fed “accident” keep increasing.

What About Job Openings?

Too many analysts rely on job openings as a sign of labor market strength. 

For discussion, please see Job Openings Plunge From Dizzy Heights, How Much is Still Real?

Do you believe job openings are as strong as reported? I don’t and never did.

In contrast, a focus on quits and the Workers’ Leverage idea seems like the real deal. 

This post originated at MishTalk.Com

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40 Comments
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Christoball
Christoball
3 years ago
An economy is always going to have necessary work to be done. The days of “Too many Chiefs not enough Indians” is going to be modified. Supervisors will have to get their hands dirty and systems will change for others to become more self regulating.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
As an aside, if you check the daily treasury statement I linked below … you’ll also see how much money the Treasury Department has in its “checkbook”. Listed at the top “TGA”.
May 17th, 2022 … $891 billion
May 17th, 2023 … $68 billion
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Tuesday i drove past the Disney studio. There was a large contingent of picketers walking the perimeter. Later the same day, i ran into a former co-worker i haven’t seen in 10 years and now works at a different post house. The strike hasn’t affected him, so far. Didn’t express any concern. He did say though, that the Covid lock down messed with a lot of people.
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
You’re still raving from the trauma.
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
The former co-worker said that when he got the booster, he had a knot under his arm pit. Assumed it was swollen lymph nodes. He also said he got Covid, anyway. A lot of people have been seriously injured by the shots, or killed by them. The CDC ignores them and continues to push them, instead of take them off the market.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
I read a story about someone that died from eating a peanut. I am shocked peanuts haven’t been banned worldwide.
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
The Swine Flu shot was withdrawn after just 35 people died. The actual death toll from the Covid shots is exponentially larger than the CDC admits to. It should be banned.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
The covid shots are, by far, the most dangerous vaccines ever given to the broad populace. A lot of the reason is vaccines, in general, are really safe.
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
Post house = Mail room?
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack
Post production. On line editing, color correction, audio sweetening.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack
Post house = People who’s home’s were foreclosed on after having their salary cut.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack
Post house = living on the street after losing your home.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
Pour House for burger and beer.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
“Labor Market Tightness”
Well, if you are going to push this point … explain this:
Fiscal Year (FY) to date withheld employment taxes COLLECTED
FY2022 … $2.059 trillion
FY2023 … $2.044 trillion
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
“The ratio is actually quits to layoffs and discharges”
Yeah, well … if you trust the data. Response rate for JOLTS plummeting.
December 2017 … 64.0%
December 2020 … 47.7%
December 2022 … 31.1%
In the absence of a response economists use “black box magic” (ie: the trend is your friend) to square things (in initial estimates). As you noted, going into a recession, revisions skew negative … coming out skew positive.
As for initial claims representing accurate current employment picture … I’ll leave it to the BLS:
“In 2022, about one-quarter of the unemployed (26 percent) who worked in the past 12 months
had applied for unemployment insurance (UI) benefits, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
reported today.”
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
Not surprised lower response rates on surveys. Only going to get worse.
Who picks up the phone these days if number not in your contact list – too many scam calls?
Who answers the door these days – people use the door camera to see who is there before answering door?
The surveyors need to get with the times and start using newer methods to gather data – maybe on-line polling.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack
I think jolts is sent through the mail. Jolts is seriously flawed. The poor response is likely because they’re mailing companies that went bankrupt.
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Jolts specifically uses CATI (Computer-assisted telephone interviewing) with some Web, E-mail, Fax.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Labor leverage top 5 : retail, education and health, accommodation and food and leisure and hospitality. The weakest groups, the screaming ladies dominate the waves.
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
3 years ago
One of the reasons the southern border is wide open.
The other big reason is that practically all of these people coming across have “clean balance sheets”.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  Bam_Man
But no “collateral.”
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
“held to maturity” issued in 2020/2021 will start to expire 3/5 years from now. The gov have to print a little and raid in “other” people
banks accounts in order to pay interest on debt and function. // Interest rates in 2020/2021 were low. “held to maturity” issued before 2020 expire now.
US gov debt bubble might cont to rise, before decaying. In late 2020’s US gov debt might be cut by 50% by doing nothing. High interest rates attract “other” people money to the gov roach motel so it can function. If people hide their money in their Steinway the gov might become bankrupt…
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  8dots
Limited to $100 Federal Reserve Notes a Steinway won’t be big enough.
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
People have to buy a Steinway first – will take the first pile of $100s.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
I firmly believe we are going to hit some sort of recession in late 2023 or early 2024 and corporations will do what they usually do which is primarily layoff those over the age of 50 sprinkled with a few 20 and 30 year olds so they don’t get accused of age discrimination. Those in the 50+ age group that saved up will just coast until they get on social security or hold part-time gig jobs and such. Those that aren’t prepared will be in a world of hurt.
But after the recession is over, I highly doubt that people will go back to their same old jobs. People will simply move on and certain professions that have a bad reputation won’t ever recover such as teaching, nursing, trucking, etc. America will be in for a rude awakening around 2025 when boomer retirements start metastasizing and the labor/wage paradigm will shift again in favor of the skilled worker.
It won’t be too long to see the labor shortages and another round of inflation but maybe those magical robots and AI will save us all. I think the Fed knows all of this which is why they plan on another hike in June but it won’t really help over the long term.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
MPO45^2, buy multi mini rentals units in 2025/2026. Buy in bulks.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
Whenever I’ve been at a place with layoffs, it’s usually new hires that go first, followed by poor performers. Age wasn’t a factor.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Well I sit at the executive level and have for 30 years and I can assure you that is generally the game plan. Older workers end up costing the most in terms of salary, benefits, health care costs, etc and the older workers generally have other ‘distractions’ like medical appointments, kids issues, etc and produce the least in terms of productivity/pay and are likely to retire soon anyway.
You sound like you work at a union shop, those are typically the rules at unions.
By the way, I’m not an advocate of these policies, just telling everyone what the standard operating procedure is at most big firms.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
MPO45^2, old workers are likely to retire, but they don’t. The beyond prime age stay on, protected by laws, unless co use a mix of layoffs, beyond prime and few low end millennial and Gen Z, before it’s too late.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  8dots
That’s exactly how it’s done. A carefully balanced package of personnel to be disposed of is prepared, because if the “layoff” is large enough the package may be provided to the Government for review. For more senior folks their severance package typically includes a clawback agreement should someone decide to sue for discrimination or bias. Such clawbacks have been upheld.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
I’ve never heard of a senior executive making layoff decisions down to the individual level. And outside of letting an entire group go, it’s always delegated to the low level managers. And for someone so important, you seem to have a lot of time to post on this forum.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
WMT : consumers are stressed. // Ilan : back to the office ==> layoffs next. Dis : ret the woke to CA, cut ESPN.
WMT 1M : no close > Dec 2020 high for 3Y.
dtj
dtj
3 years ago
The labor “shortage” of the last few years is nothing like the actual labor shortage we had in the late 1990s.
Isn’t it strange how we don’t hear stories of truck driver shortages anymore? There was never an actual shortage and now that the trucking industry is collapsing, the “story” has been forgotten.
Similarly, there isn’t a shortage of nurses. There’s a shortage of employers willing to offer the wages and working conditions needed to attract them.
The real test of current worker leverage will be UPS drivers, whose contract is up in July. They have been working under a contract that pre-dated the pandemic and assumed 2-3% inflation.
After adjusting for inflation, they are now making less than they did before the pandemic. They have a “COLA” in name only. It amounted to 82 cents an hour last year.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  dtj
Not sure where you get your info but there is certainly a nursing shortage all over the country and the problem will grow exponentially worse as thousands retire over the next few years.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
I don’t know if there’s a nursing shortage or not, but you can’t trust anything coming from NPR. They’re 100% propaganda all the time.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Propaganda

The systematic propagation of a doctrine or cause or of information reflecting the views and interests of those advocating such a doctrine or cause.
So please explain to me why NPR would advocate a nursing shortage “propaganda” and the ulterior purpose of this nefarious plot to point out something anyone with a simple google search can find out?
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
You don’t understand how propaganda works. Propaganda organizations don’t always lie. They just never report anything that hurts their interests. For example, CNN will report on a natural catastrophe that occurred like a hurricane, which did in fact happen, but then they’ll add at the end something about climate change causing it. With nothing to back it up. The last part is the propaganda.
I don’t know anything about nursing shortages and I’m not going to research it. I’m just pointing out NPR never reports anything that’s contrary to what the current administration is trying to further. So take everything they report with skepticism.
dtj
dtj
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
There is NO shortage of nurses. There are more qualified nurses in the U.S. than there are openings. The problem? They’re not going to work for the wages and working conditions currently offered. 100,000 have left the field since 2020 but many of those would go back if the wages and conditions improved (and perhaps if they weren’t forced to get an MRNA injection).
Mjs357
Mjs357
3 years ago
Reply to  dtj
UAW in staring down a strike as well…FedEx is still in deep pooh.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  Mjs357
UAW always seems to strike at the dumbest time. Ford and GM are trying to let people go and shut down assembly lines. Holding out for months or weeks will help them.

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