>They don't consider that most unemployed 58 year olds are not counted because they "retired," stopped seeking work or receive a disability benefit.
Why should any of these people be considered "unemployed"?
Every time there's a discussion of unemployment, or inflation, people bring up the measurements as "misleading". The BLS tracks this stuff because people in the real world need to use it, not because there's some disingenuous political purpose. There are a ton of different metrics to get a broad picture of the labour market, as defined, and they put them out there, free to use. The idea that the army of economists at the BLS don't understand things like people being retired is just wrong.
We spend a lot of time criticizing journalists and politicians, but how many people bother to look at the data themselves if interested?
It's actually kinda straightforward, and very clear about what measures they're using. The numbers are bit scary - "The employment-population ratio, at 56.6 percent, changed little over the month but is 4.5 percentage points lower than in February."
"The number of persons not in the labor force who currently want a job, at 7.2 million, changed little in September; this measure is 2.3 million higher than in February. These individuals were not counted as unemployed because they were not actively looking for work during the last 4 weeks or were unavailable to take a job."
So that's 12m officially unemployed, plus 7m "not in the labor force" but who want a job.
So yeah, the article is kinda on point; that the numbers don't mean what they think we mean. But I have to agree: that's not because the numbers aren't available for anyone to look at and understand.
Collecting disability doesn’t necessarily mean you’re incapacitated or can’t work at all. Depression is a common disability, for example. It’s very common for veterans who served more than 4 years to get some amount of disability if they are persistent, and often not for crippling injuries (sleep apnea is a popular one)
Yes, it is truly scary. A large portion of them are in more rural areas that have been decimated. Also, IIRC states pay money to trainers/consultants that help people get on the national disability programs.
That number doesn't match what the SSA publishes in their annual reports.[1]. They put the figure on disability at 8.9 million disabled workers, with 11.2 million total beneficiaries once you include the disabled workers' children.)
That said, the real figures are still startling. They represents 4.4% of the US worker population but some states rely incredibly heavily on the program.
Alabama - 8.0% of the population
Arkansas - 7.9% of the population
Kentucky - 7.6% of the population
Maine - 7.4% of the population
Mississippi - 7.5% of the population
West Virginia - 8.6% of the population
No idea why this was downvoted into oblivion, so I vouched for it. It seems to state factual information and cites direct sources. The information presented is located on page 29. Maybe instead of just drive-by downvoting, you can state some reasoning for doing so.
The reality is that "unemployment" is a highly visible metric. Sure, the data itself is available... A big part of the reason why it's important to have this data available is exactly for this purpose: call bullshit on the unemployment numbers when necessary...
...especially considering that "want a job" is measured in very specific ways.
> reality is that "unemployment" is a highly visible metric.
Is it though? The photos of queues for jobs and unemployment benefits is something of the distant past. Find out that a different measure makes the rate 3x higher came as news to me.
> Why should any of these people be considered "unemployed"?
Because we're actually trying to count "people who would be employed, were there more jobs available"
But as we can't read people's minds, we can't tell the person who's happily retired at 58 from someone the same age who'd rather be in work but can't find it, and has started drawing their pension out of necessity.
Well it's a spectrum. Many of those who are happily retired would be willing to go back to work if someone offered them enough money. As wages rise the labor force participation rate also goes up.
> As wages rise the labor force participation rate also goes up.
Wouldn't any such effect be temporary though? As wages rise, doesn't inflation rise as well, negating the benefit of a rising wage.
Wouldn't it also be true that as certain goods deflate in price, labor force participation should go up as well since the same wage allows you to buy more stuff?
This goes back to wealth isn't the money you have, it's what you can buy. Today most people, even those at the bottom, have access to many things today than even John D. Rockefeller didn't have access to when he was alive.
Anyways, not asserting anything in particular here, but just raising that it seems far more complicated than just wages rising lead to greater labor force participating.
No. Inflation is primarily caused by the government printing money, not by rising wages.
If wages rise but productivity does not increase, yes, that will cause inflation, but if productivity is not increasing wages cannot rise because there is nowhere for the increased wages to come from.
If wages rise because productivity is increasing, there are more goods and services available, so supply keeps up with demand and prices don't rise. (In fact they will generally fall in the areas where productivity is increasing, if the money supply is not being messed with.)
> Wouldn't it also be true that as certain goods deflate in price, labor force participation should go up as well since the same wage allows you to buy more stuff?
There will probably be more people willing to work, yes. Whether that translates into more actual jobs will depend a lot on how easy it is to start new businesses, since that's where the new jobs will have to come from. Our current regulatory regime makes it much more difficult than it should be to start new businesses.
> wealth isn't the money you have, it's what you can buy. Today most people, even those at the bottom, have access to many things today than even John D. Rockefeller didn't have access to when he was alive.
This is a very good point, which I wish more people would recognize.
Intuitively, printing money can't be the only cause at least at a non-macro level. If all the wealth currently currently squirreled away in places that banks can't trivially lend out (art, real estate, etc.) were instead cash in the hands of the lower and middle classes, I would expect a lot more money to be chasing those goods and services against which we measure inflation. This demand-pull inflation against the goods and services we use to measure inflation would cause the measure of inflation to rise and everything that indexes against this measure would adjust.
A change in the savings ratio could also cause demand-pull inflation without an increase in printing money. As could a change in reserve requirements.
There are also cost-push inflation from things like oil supply shocks, poor farm yields or changes in exchange rates.
I would also expect changes in the aggregate balance of payments between a country and all its trading partners to impact inflation experienced by people in that country.
> Intuitively, printing money can't be the only cause
Theoretically it certainly can be. To take the simplest idealized example, if the production of goods and services is unchanging, and people's needs are unchanging, the only possible source of price changes is a change in the money supply.
In the real world, of course, the quantity of goods and services does change and so do people's needs. But that just means the price system now has a genuine function: to inform people about the changes in supply and demand through changes in prices. Messing with the money supply just obfuscates those price signals with an arbitrary quantity of noise. So while it's true that messing with the money supply isn't the only cause of price changes in a real economy, that's certainly not an argument that printing money is okay.
> If all the wealth currently currently squirreled away in places that banks can't trivially lend out (art, real estate, etc.) were instead cash in the hands of the lower and middle classes, I would expect a lot more money to be chasing those goods and services against which we measure inflation.
That would depend on where the cash came from. In the case of real estate, for example, if you want a mortgage, the government will print most of the money (all but the three percent or so that banks in the upper reserve tranche have to put up--but IIRC even that minimal requirement was waived by the Fed fairly recently). So turning real estate into cash (by, say, taking out mortgages to buy homes from lower and middle income people who have more house than they want or who would rather rent instead) just means the government prints more money. Which will indeed increase average prices, but that's just an example of what I was talking about.
If, OTOH, you're talking about something like auctioning off expensive art works and using the money to start a business that employs people, so those people now have more cash to spend, that just means a transfer of cash from whoever buys the art works. That won't affect average prices at all; it will, however, increase the price of art works (assuming that the supply of those is basically static) and decrease the price of whatever things the people who bought the art works would have bought instead. Those two changes will cancel out on average.
I think we're talking past each other here. I don't disagree with you at all on a theoretical level. Yes you need more money chasing the same goods.
I'm talking more about on a practical level in terms of the prices that most people will see/experience when they are going about there daily life. I even cited very real examples of both demand pull and cost push inflation that have nothing to do with the money supply. These as far as I know are all examples acknowledged by economists as causes of inflation.
If for example tomorrow there were a super volcano explosion and a catastrophic decline in the world's food supply, we would see a massive spike in food costs. Everyone needs to eat and the food supply would be limited, so prices will go up. Since food costs are an input cost for the well being of all workers around the world, we should expect that there will be upwards price pressure on many goods and services used to measure inflation most people actually feel and experience.
> I'm talking more about on a practical level in terms of the prices that most people will see/experience when they are going about there daily life.
It's quite true that people are used to seeing a particular price level, and changes in either direction tend to cause them problems, even though, abstractly speaking, decreases in prices should be seen as a good thing.
> I'm talking more about on a practical level in terms of the prices that most people will see/experience when they are going about there daily life. I even cited very real examples of both demand pull and cost push inflation that have nothing to do with the money supply. These as far as I know are all examples acknowledged by economists as causes of inflation.
And this is a misuse of the term "inflation", because "inflation" is supposed to be bad, and so economists are basically trying to argue that the natural ups and downs of business, which are unavoidable in a world where things are constantly changing and nobody has a crystal ball, are bad things that the government needs to intervene to stop. We would all be much better off if economists would stop peddling such nonsense and just frankly admit to us all that, well, the natural ups and downs of business are unavoidable in a world where things are constantly changing and nobody has a crystal ball--not even economists.
> If for example tomorrow there were a super volcano explosion and a catastrophic decline in the world's food supply, we would see a massive spike in food costs
Yes, and what would happen next?
In a sane world, what would happen is that entrepreneurs would start figuring out ways to produce more food, because there is obviously a huge need for that, as shown by the huge price signal in food. Maybe they would build huge greenhouses with solar lamps powered by nuclear electricity. Maybe they would figure out how to harvest algae in quantity to make algaeburgers.
In our actual world, what happens is that governments wring their hands and pontificate and monkey with the economy and make things worse instead of better.
> To take the simplest idealized example, if the production of goods and services is unchanging, and people's needs are unchanging, the only possible source of price changes is a change in the money supply.
There are other possibilities. Suppose that employers gain bargaining power relative to the workers, but people are really resistant to taking a pay cut. The employers all raise prices instead.
Not in that particular hypothetical. All the things you cite are only relevant in a world where things do change. So if you want to talk about that world, it's pointless to respond to a hypothetical of mine where that kind of change is ruled out to make a particular point.
> Suppose that employers gain bargaining power relative to the workers, but people are really resistant to taking a pay cut. The employers all raise prices instead.
In the real world, where things do change and everyone knows and expects that, how do employers magically "gain bargaining power relative to the workers"? The only way that can happen, if the government is not messing with things (the money supply, but also other things, like the laws and regulations that govern employment), is for some technological change or some exogenous factor to favor employers over workers. And if that happens, and you're a worker, yes, you just got blindsided by change, and if you're an employer, you just got an unearned benefit (assuming you're not the one who actually invented the technological change). Welcome to the real world.
Of course, in the real real world, where the government does mess with things, there are plenty of ways for employers, particularly large corporations that have lots of cash, to gain bargaining power over workers without having to do anything to earn it. And yes, workers would probably be resistant to taking a pay cut, since they know that the bargaining power the employers are trying to use against them was not earned. And yes, employers would probably raise prices instead. And the best way to prevent all that is for the government to stop messing with the economy, so employers can't buy their way out of bad business practices.
> ...is changes in expectations about future needs or productivity.
Which are only rational if such things in fact have changed in the past. In that particular hypothetical of mine, they don't. And everyone knows that, the same we we all know in the real world that such things do change. That doesn't require omniscience; it just requires ordinary knowledge of the past and common sense.
Of course in the real world, as I just said, such things do change; but, as I said in my earlier post, that just means that monkeying with the money supply masks real price signals that should not be masked.
You can want a job, but not be looking for a job because your prior attempts to secure one have been unsuccessful. This is called discouraged unemployment and figures into the overall category of marginally-attached workers.
Exactly. Which means you can't count what you say you're trying to count. What you're trying to count requires telepathy.
That's why economists look at revealed preference--what people actually do, not what you guess they might be thinking. So the correct way to see if there are people who would be employed if there were more jobs available, is...to let private individuals start new businesses and see if the increased number of jobs increases the number of people who are employed. But that would require the government to stop trying to micromanage everything, which is why the obvious solution of making it easier to run businesses so that more people will start them in order to create more jobs is a nonstarter politically.
Being easily and consistently measurable is one virtue. It's nice that "unemployment" can be measured this way monthly without too much measurement controversy. Useful for charting trends with high resolution.
That doesn't change the fact that it is not an estimate of "unemployment," defined in a way that we care about more. If you ignore the involuntarily retired 58 year old because measurement is subjective then you are undercounting by a lot. You're not undercounting evenly, especially over time, geo or in extreme circumstances (like recession).
It's an issue if the primary unemployment measure does not even estimate "unemployment" harmonious with a common sense definition
Yeah, but that information is captured under an different measure.
The reported U-3 unemployment rate is measuring the rate of full-time job loss in the economy. That makes a good barometer of the economy as it can describe if job losses are accelerating or not.
You can pick any of the alternate measures and they all say pretty much the same thing. But by overlooking those who have dropped out of the labor market, the U-3 focuses more on what is happening with the labor market now not several years ago.
You can try this for yourself by plotting the U-1 through U-6 rates on the same graph and picking the one you think is most useful as a snapshot of the labor force. You'll probably land on the U-3 as the U-1 doesn't show upticks in unemployment very well and the U-6 muddies the severity of upticks in unemployment. The broad strokes will be the same, but the nuance is missing.
>"The reported U-3 unemployment rate is measuring the rate of full-time job loss in the economy. That makes a good barometer of the economy as it can describe if job losses are accelerating or not."
I think this is a perceptive statement; U-3 is most like the derivative of unemployment, so it's sensitive to changes, but not to steady-state issues.
We should probably look at U-6 to help understand where we stand long-term, and U-3 to get a glimpse of whether things are getting better or worse. Unfortunately, I don't think many people want to think about these issues separately, so they'll only want one number.
Most people retire with an income stream that is enough to live one. Now I'll grant that enough to live on is low standard of living, but it will pay for food, health care (most get some form of medicare), your apartment, and you can afford a basic car. Of course if you live in a high cost of living area like San Francisco it isn't enough, but for most of the US you will live an nice enough life. You can always want more, but your needs are met.
Third world conditions are much worse than that. I've seen families sleeping on sidewalks. No car, no health care.
Sure everybody wants more. There are a lot of retired people who would like a job, but that is as much about the social connection as money. There are also those who lost their money (scams target retired people) and need a job, but that isn't most of them.
I think the bit you're missing is that there is a cohort of people who haven't retired, precisely because they lack an income stream that is enough to live on, but they are counted as retired by most measures of unemployment.
My father turns 70 in three days, and he has struggled to find long-term work for the last ten years. He'll work for a year, search for work for 15 months, work for another 18 months, etc. He would like to be working now, but COVID-19 probably marks the end of his working days forever.
He's been counted as retired a few times during the last decade, though he never was until this year.
How do you know he was counted as retired? BLS shares their survey and how they determine if someone is unemployed - they basically ask if they are available to work and actively seeking work. I didn’t see any cutoff for age.
I could definitely be wrong, but my understanding is that when unemployment benefits run out, so does one's status as unemployed, since they've lost the point of contact that enables them to ask those questions.
At least twice in the last decade, he's been unemployed so long his benefits ran out. Perhaps the label in that case isn't "retired," but he wasn't counted as unemployed, either.
Number of unemployment insurance claims is sometimes cited as an economic indicator, but it's definitely not the main measure of unemployment.
The BLS tracks six measures of unemployment rate via survey called U1-U6. U3 is the official unemployment rate, but they report the others as well[1].
For U3, you are considered unemployed if you do not have a job, have actively looked for work in the prior 4 weeks, and are currently available for work. U4 is that plus anyone who wants a job, but gave up looking because they don't think they will find one. U6 adds in people who only have part-time work but want full-time work.
Check out the link in my reply above, it's pretty interesting. It lays out exactly how they collect the unemployment statistics and calls out that they can't use unemployment insurance numbers for the exact reason you said - benefits run out, but people are still looking for work.
They basically survey 60,000 people and ask a specific set of questions to figure out which "bucket" people are in.
U-3 does not exclude those whose benefits have run out but are still actively looking for work. It relies on social insurance claims in part, but also uses surveys to estimate how many folks are looking for work that aren’t receiving unemployment.
>> Why should any of these people be considered "unemployed"?
There is no abstract reason, unless we're just talking about what the word unemployed "really" means. Pointless semantics.
The reason they should be considered unemployed is contextual. "Unemployment" is the measure used by journalists & politicians to gauge the labour market. In that context, it is very important to consider these people who have stopped expecting to work unemployed. They are part of the "slack." Their experience experience of the labour market is "i can't get a job."
If unemployment is lower than it was in year X because people stop applying or qualifying for some unemployment benefit... that doesn't mean the labour market is better.
Everything is contextual. People arguing for alternative unemployment measures aren't (generally) arguing semantics. Their arguing that the metric is misleading us.
> "Why should any of these people be considered 'unemployed'?"
if you want to know how well we're allocating our (labor) resources as an economy, it's important to get a full picture of how many capable people are un-/under-employed.
when we make national economic policy, it should be to make meaningful progress toward putting all of our capable and willing people (true unemployment) to highest and best use, not arbitrarily just those who have recently become un-/under-employed (nominal unemployment).
> if you want to know how well we're allocating our (labor) resources as an economy
There is no single "we" who allocates those resources. That is a fundamental fallacy in this whole way of looking at things. We seem to have this belief that, if only our government experts could find the right aggregate measure and micromanage the economy based on it, everything would work just fine. That belief is false.
> when we make national economic policy, it should be to make meaningful progress toward putting all of our capable and willing people (true unemployment) to highest and best use
That's not something the government should even be trying to do, because no central planning entity can do it.
What the government should be doing is guaranteeing a level playing field, and letting freedom work. Historically, times when the government has done that have been the times when the US economy has created the most wealth.
>There is no single "we" who allocates those resources. That is a fundamental fallacy in this whole way of looking at things. We seem to have this belief that, if only our government experts could find the right aggregate measure and micromanage the economy based on it, everything would work just fine. That belief is false.
Well, right now they are "macromanaging" it away from a system that could possibly work. Central bank policy heavily skews toward capital and thereby into deflation (or at least lack of inflation). Inflation is the treadmill that keeps the economy going and it has been broken for a long time.
The more I get into economics the more I understand that the real world is not meaningfully different from a game in terms of policing. The details are different but general concepts like deflation or inflation are still the same. The fact that economies can only function if money is in the hands of those who are doing the work is still the same. In the most realistic economy games it is even possible to liquidate your company and start fresh after messing it up. So there is now the obvious problem that if you want a growing player base you can't just let the biggest players take over 90% of the market and force newcomers to compete with them and let almost all of them fail like in the real world. Unemployment can't exist in such a game, "unemployed" players aren't playing the game!
Well, the obvious answer to solving unemployment is a job guarantee funded through "printing" money. If people are unemployed they will take the job guarantee which in turn creates new money. Suddenly there are lots of paying consumers but since the guaranteed job doesn't actually increase the supply of goods we get to see inflation among consumer goods. Now you may be thinking that this will cause runaway inflation except it can't. When demand for products increases, so does the demand for labor. New jobs are created which pay more than the job guarantee but they don't cause inflation. It's a self balancing system.
> right now they are "macromanaging" it away from a system that could possibly work
Yes, but not the way you are claiming.
> Inflation is the treadmill that keeps the economy going
If by "inflation" you mean printing money, no, that is noise in the price signals that keep the economy regulated. And as central banks print more and more of it, they mask valid price signals more and more and thereby make the regulation of the economy worse and worse. And then they claim they need to print more money to "fix" the problem.
If by "inflation" you mean "prices going up", if the money supply were fixed, the prices of everything going up would signal an unhealthy economy, not a healthy one. With a fixed money supply, in the short term, whenever the supply/demand situation changes (and it is always changing), some prices will go up and some will go down. In the long term, the general price level would be expected to go down as average productivity improves. If the general price level is going up, it means average productivity is getting worse, which, as noted, is a sign of an unhealthy economy.
The main purpose of printing money is to allow governments to obfuscate the fact that they are making the economy worse by masking what would otherwise be obvious price signals showing it. Every ordinary person understands that if the prices of everything are going up, that's bad. So governments, politically, cannot allow sustained increases in the general price level, unless they are so small as to not be noticeable except over many years. But they can't micromanage their way to a healthy economy either, so their only choice is to print money to disguise what is going on.
> the obvious answer to solving unemployment is a job guarantee funded through "printing" money
This would be government micromanagement on an even more massive scale and would be a disaster.
The obvious answer to solving unemployment is to make it easier for people to start businesses, since that is what creates new jobs. The way to do that is for the government to stop micromanaging the economy and let individual people figure things out.
that "we" is the whole of the citizens and residents of the country, not a central planning committee. the government is the power apparatus that is meant to express and realize our common good. as a power apparatus, it cuts both ways, and we must remain vigilant as citizens on keeping it aligned with our goals and desires.
wealth by itself, especially as we measure it, is hollow and a poor collective goal, and its singular pursuit expressly undermines the level playing field and much of our humanity. prosperity is a more holistic expression of our collective goal, with wealth creation not being the principal ingredient of prosperity. industry, purpose, solidarity, community, well-being, welfare, success, esteem, respect, free expression, etc. are all (much) higher on that list.
it behooves us to look beyond simplistic ideologies (which only benefit the political, by collapsing our horizons insidiously) to perform our duties and responsibilities to each other as a society.
> that "we" is the whole of the citizens and residents of the country, not a central planning committee
But none of us have the power to run the entire country, and we couldn't do it properly even if we had the power. So saying that "we" should do things that are beyond our power is pointless.
If you think not enough people have jobs, start a business and hire some. If everyone who complains about unemployment went and did that instead, if it didn't completely solve the problem, it would certainly make a huge dent.
> the government is the power apparatus that is meant to express and realize our common good.
If "our common good" just means ensuring a level playing field and letting freedom work, sure. That's what the US government was originally intended to do.
However, governments today have gone far beyond that to try to dictate to everybody what "our common good" should mean based on some particular interest group's ideas about social policy. That is a recipe for disaster, and we should stop doing it.
> wealth by itself, especially as we measure it, is hollow and a poor collective goal
I'm not sure what you mean by "as we measure it". If you mean that "we" measure it in money, then of course you are correct: money is not wealth.
If you measure wealth as economists actually measure it, however, by the possibilities that are open to people--the range of things they can choose to do with the resources and options available to them--then people today are wealthier than pretty much every human being who ever lived.
> industry, purpose, solidarity, community, well-being, welfare, success, esteem, respect, free expression, etc. are all (much) higher on that list.
If you think these are valuable things, then go build them.
If you think government should dictate to people that they need to build these things, whether they want to or not, IMO you are being inconsistent, since the whole point of all these good things is that people can only do them voluntarily; if they are forced to do them, you don't get them, you get sham imitations instead. So once again, government should not be used to impose these things on people; it should be used to ensure a level playing field so free people can build them as they see fit.
Yup, the occasional hedonistic adjustments and product substitutions that they do for CPI is already prime fodder for perpetual inflation conspiracy stories. It will be a disaster when they do even more subjective "degrees-of-unemployment weights".
There is absolutely no purpose other than propagandistic for the percentage commonly referred to as "unemployment" with no other qualifiers. That number's only purpose is to start dropping a short time after an unemployment shock whether or not any jobs were actually added to the economy.
The other numbers aren't to give a "broad picture" of the labor market, they're to give the entire picture of the labor market. "Unemployment" contributes nothing. At the time of a shock it echos other metrics, and after a pause of a few months it announces that whatever the administration announced its reaction to the shock would be is starting to work, no matter what the other numbers say.
But the article's graph shows exactly the opposite. According to the "true unemployment rate", the job market has fully recovered from the COVID shock and is sitting at where it was in 2017-18, whereas the official unemployment rate indicates that there's still a problem. I assume we can agree that there is indeed still a problem, so it seems like the official statistics have it right here.
Why should any of these people be considered "unemployed"?
Every time there's a discussion of unemployment, or inflation, people bring up the measurements as "misleading". The BLS tracks this stuff because people in the real world need to use it, not because there's some disingenuous political purpose. There are a ton of different metrics to get a broad picture of the labour market, as defined, and they put them out there, free to use. The idea that the army of economists at the BLS don't understand things like people being retired is just wrong.
We spend a lot of time criticizing journalists and politicians, but how many people bother to look at the data themselves if interested?