Another
Phony Employment Report
by
Paul Craig Roberts
PaulCraigRoberts.org
Recently
by Paul Craig Roberts: How
the Government’s Lies Become Truth
October 5.
Todays employment report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics
shows 114,000 new jobs in September and a drop in the rate of unemployment
from 8.1% to 7.8%. As 114,000 new jobs are not sufficient to stay
even with population growth, the drop in the unemployment rate is
the result of not counting discouraged workers who are defined away
as not in the labor force.
According to
the BLS, In September, 2.5 million persons were marginally
attached to the labor force. These individuals wanted
and were available for work, but they were not counted
as unemployed because they had not searched for work in the 4 weeks
preceding the survey.
In other words,
2.5 million unemployed Americans were not counted as unemployed.
The stock market
rose on the phony good news. Bloombergs headline: U.S.
Stocks Rise as Unemployment Rate Unexpectedly Drops.
A truer picture
of the dire employment situation is provided by the 600,000 rise
over the previous month in involuntary part-time workers. According
to the BLS, These individuals were working part time because
their hours had been cut back or because they were unable to find
a full-time job.
Turning to
the 114,000 new jobs, once again the jobs are concentrated in lowly
paid domestic service jobs that cannot be offshored. Manufacturing
jobs declined by 16,000.
As has been
the case for a decade, two categories health care and social
assistance (primarily ambulatory health care services) and waitresses
and bartenders account for 53% of the new jobs. The BLS never ceases
to find ever growing employment of people in restaurants and bars
despite the rising dependence of the US population on food stamps.
The elderly are rising as a percentage of the American population,
but I sometimes wonder if employment in ambulatory health care services
is rising faster than the elderly population. Whether these reported
jobs are real, I do not know.
The rest of
the new jobs were accounted for by retail trade, transportation
and warehousing, financial activities (primarily credit intermediation),
professional and business services (primarily administrative and
waste services), and state government education, where the 13,600
reported new jobs seem odd in light of the teacher layoffs and rise
in classroom size.
The
high-tech jobs that economists promised would be our reward for
offshoring American manufacturing jobs and tradeable professional
services, such as software engineering and IT, have never materialized.
The New Economy was just another hoax, like Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction and Iranian nukes.
While employment
falters, the consumer price index (CPI-U) in August increased 0.6
percent, the largest since June 2009. If the August rate is annualized,
it means bad news on the inflation front. Instead of bringing us
high tech jobs, is the New Economy bringing back the
stagflation of the late 1970s? Time will tell.
October
6, 2012
Paul
Craig Roberts, a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
americans lost the protection of law, has been released by Random
House. Visit his website.
Copyright
© 2012 Paul
Craig Roberts
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