Posted on 02/01/2004 6:06:51 AM PST by nwrep
LeeAundra Temescu
Sat Jan 31, 8:39 AM ET
By Andrea Hopkins
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - According to the most widely accepted measure of U.S. employment, public-speaking coach and consultant LeeAundra Temescu was not among the 130 million Americans who had a job in 2003.
But don't try telling her that.
"Was I working?" the Los Angeles resident said. "In terms of speaking and writing and marketing and doing all that sort of stuff -- yeah, I was working."
Because she is one of more than 15 million self-employed workers in the United States, Temescu is on nobody's payroll -- and thus does not show up on the Labor Department (news - web sites)'s employer survey used each month to assess the strength of the job market.
The failure of the survey to count independent contractors has come under fire by President Bush (news - web sites)'s economic team and some analysts, who argue it underestimates job growth by ignoring one of the fastest-growing sectors of the economy.
"There is a big error factor in those numbers," Treasury Secretary John Snow said after Labor reported a scant 1,000 rise in December payrolls. "I think they may well have understated (job growth), and we will see a restatement in the future."
A rise in self-employed and other nonpayroll workers would bolster the argument of Bush supporters that the "jobless" nature of America's recovery has been exaggerated.
LIES, DAMN LIES AND STATISTICS
While outsourcing is not new, a rise in self-employed contractors could explain the slow rebound in employment as counted by the payrolls survey, which shows 2.3 million jobs have been lost since Bush took office in January 2001.
For the same period, a smaller study of households, based on the Current Population Survey, shows a 700,000 rise in employment -- a seemingly contradictory sign that has fueled Republican skepticism about the accuracy of the bleaker payrolls data.
According to the Current Population Survey, the number of self-employed Americans surged 3.9 percent in the last three years, far outstripping a 0.6 percent rise in overall employment.
But experts also take issue with the household survey, saying it is too small, too volatile and possibly overstates population growth. Moreover, it registers a worker as employed even if he or she works only one hour in the survey week.
Federal Reserve (news - web sites) Governor Ben Bernanke said the household survey's accuracy could also suffer if individuals misunderstand the questions "or for one reason or another misreport their own labor market status or that of other members of the household."
Self-employed consultant Temescu agrees. For much of 2003, she was one of 60,000 surveyed for the household report. Trying to categorize herself as "employed" or "unemployed" was tough in a week when she had no paying clients but was busy marketing. And she said the Census Bureau (news - web sites) questioners were just as confused about her employment status.
"There were a lot of times when I'd give an answer and they'd go 'Oh, I don't have a code for that'," she recalled. "It was kind disconcerting to ... have to give answers that I know weren't accurate because I was constrained by the nature of the questionnaire."
WAVE OF THE FUTURE
As president of SurePayroll, the fifth-largest U.S. payroll services provider, Michael Alter has seen a definite shift away from the traditional employer-employee relationships captured by the payroll survey.
Last year, payments by his small business clients to independent contractors surged 12 percent -- and Alter himself says he is using more contract workers.
"I personally believe there has been a structural change," he said. "You can get people who have very specialized skills for a very reasonable price, and you don't have to put them on staff full-time."
Economist Joel Naroff believes the outsourcing trend, which took off in the 1990s, is here to stay.
"Businesses have been looking to temporary help or outsourcing to lower their employment -- and therefore their health care and pension and other responsibilities," he said.
Government data show employment costs rose 3.8 percent in 2003. Outsourcing work to a self-employed contractor cuts those costs by up to a third -- because health care, pensions and other benefits make up 30 percent of total compensation.
"Clearly these kind of huge increases in health care costs encourage businesses to move toward temporary help, outsourcing, or setting people up as consultants," Naroff said. "It's clearly getting stronger."
Meanwhile, Temescu shrugs off the government's inability to accurately count her employment and says the benefits of her situation are worth the risks involved.
"The alternative of working as a salaried worker in an organization is even more unpalatable," Temescu said. "There is just something about working for myself -- I really, truly do love what I do."
The problem is not with the government, but with the 'forces of darkness' that control both the dems and too many freepers. It doesn't seem to matter that 3 million new jobs have been created.
The think they're 'underemployed' because they can't find anyone to pay them all they want, so they call it a 'jobless recovery' and call for raising my taxes.
How will I ever survive? I do not know but the whole experience is very liberating.
http://www.sba.gov/starting_business/startup/areyouready.html
federal spending is not going down, it is going up. Those who still have jobs, those who have not lost jobs to asia, will be expected to pay much higher taxes, to make up for all those who no longer pay taxes because their job or factory moved to asia.
free trade is not free. If you want to enjoy all the direct benefits of free trade(e.g higher profits on NIke shoes and other products now made by cheap labor, a much stronger India and communist china, higher bonuses for CEO's who move factories to asia, etc), then you must be expected to pay those inevitable indirect costs of free trade - else you are nothing but a parasite.
You should be glad to pay more taxes in the future(you should expect your taxes to rise to balance the budget) - it means that more american citizen jobs are being done by chinese communists.
I bet you belong to a labor union.
I'm not recommending that people just go out and start their own business. Believe me, it's not easy, and in fact the main way we ended up in financial hell was through a first business failure. This was followed by a period of profitable employment, but we never could catch up from that first failure.
Then, while still in very bad shape financially, we moved to long-term unemployed.
My starting my own business was an act of utter necessity: I simply couldn't get a decent job, no matter how many times I applied, what new skills I taught myself, or what I tried.
Heck, I'm still applying for regular full-time jobs - and missing them.
If someone offered me a decent job today, I'd take it. But increasingly, I'm moving closer to the day when I won't "need" the job from someone else.
And I'm even starting to like it.
The day I approach being able to do just as well by myself may well be just around the corner. And when that day comes, you can bet I'll happily tell all the employers who've politely but disdainfully told me to kiss off, again and again, to go take a flying you know what.
Many people went into business selling apples during the Depression. I guess that makes them no longer unemployed.
I was forced to make a choice. Ever see The Shawshank Redemption?
U.S. Vehicle Sales Seen Edging Up in '04U.S. new car and light truck sales are expected to increase this year as the economic recovery puts the pedal to the metal for the auto industry... Paul Taylor, chief economist at the National Automobile Dealers Association, said new vehicle sales will total about 16.8 million vehicles in 2004, up from 16.6 million in 2003. That would still mark a decline from the all-time high of 17.4 million vehicles sold in 2000, however, a banner year for an industry that accounts for roughly one-fifth of U.S. retail sales. Taylor's forecast is more conservative than some estimates. But he attributed that to an expected hike in interest rates in the latter part of the year...
Sat Jan 31, 5:59 PM ETSelf-Employment May Mask U.S. Job GrowthAccording to the most widely accepted measure of U.S. employment, public-speaking coach and consultant LeeAundra Temescu was not among the 130 million Americans who had a job in 2003... Because she is one of more than 15 million self-employed workers in the United States, Temescu is on nobody's payroll -- and thus does not show up on the Labor Department's employer survey used each month to assess the strength of the job market. The failure of the survey to count independent contractors has come under fire by President Bush's economic team and some analysts, who argue it underestimates job growth by ignoring one of the fastest-growing sectors of the economy... A rise in self-employed and other nonpayroll workers would bolster the argument of Bush supporters that the "jobless" nature of America's recovery has been exaggerated... Government data show employment costs rose 3.8 percent in 2003. Outsourcing work to a self-employed contractor cuts those costs by up to a third -- because health care, pensions and other benefits make up 30 percent of total compensation.
by Andrea Hopkins
Sat Jan 31, 8:39 AM ET
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