Posted on 11/09/2013 6:05:54 AM PST by Kaslin
The Department of Labor has issued its monthly employment report and the item that will attract the most attention is that the unemployment rate marginally increased to 7.3 percent.
That number is worthy of some attention, but I think it distracts attention from a far more important set of data. What we should be more worried about is the overall supply of employed workers.
I dont want to sound like a boring economist (is there any other kind?), but our economic well being is a function of what we produce, and and what we produce is a function of the amount of labor and capital that is being productively utilized. We economists use jargon about factors of production, but what were really trying to say is that our living standards depend on good jobs and wise investment.
Which is why the most depressing bit of data from the Labor Department isnt the unemployment rate. We should be far more worried about the employment-population ratio.
Heres a chart based on DOL data showing the percent of the working-age population that is employed (click here to see the Labor Departments explanation of this variable). As you can see, that key number used to be close to 63 percent. Now its down close to 58 percent.
To be fair, this isnt all Obamas fault. Not even close.
The big drop occurred at the end of the Bush years. Some of that drop was cyclical, caused by the recession. And some of it was presumably the cumulative impact of Bushs big-government policies.
But whats noteworthy is that the recession has been over since mid-2009 and the employment-population ratio hasnt improved. And thats something that we can blame in part on Obama.
Its not just cranky libertarians who worry about this trend in the employment data.
William Galston of the Brookings Institution shares some very disturbing numbers in a Wall Street Journal column about the decline in labor force participation in the United States.
The great American jobs machine is faltering, and it is time for Washington to pay attention. Participation in the workforce is falling, the pace of job creation is anemic, and long-term unemployment remains stubbornly high. the United States was once viewed as the home of the employment miracle. As recently as 1989, it was a leader in labor-force participation and employment rates among the worlds most developed economies. That is no longer the case. When we consider prime-age workers age 35 to 54past the period of extended education that success in the 21st century economy so often requiresthe comparison looks even worse: Average participation rates in the 16 comparison countries are four to six points higher than they are in the U.S. Last year, the U.S. ranked in the bottom third for women, and dead last for men. prospects for robust growth and shared prosperity are dim unless we can devise more effective labor-market policies.
I suspect Galston and I would only partly agree on effective labor-market policies, but I think a big part of the answer is smaller government and less intervention.
If we want more jobs, we need to make it more profitable for employers to create jobs. And, asthis very clever cartoon parody indicates (and also as shown in this great Chuck Asay cartoon), we need to make it more attractive for people to get back in the job market.
Lets conclude by returning to the data on the unemployment rate. I dont think its particularly newsworthy that the joblessness rate crept up by a small amount. Any single month of data, after all, might be a statistical blip.
However, I cant resist pointing out that todays unemployment rate is still more than two percentage points higher than the White House claimed it would be if we enacted the failed stimulus.
Heres an updated version of the chart showing the gap between what the Obama Administration promised and whats been delivered.
Yup, good old Keynesian economics. Over-promising and under-delivering ever since the failed policies of Hoover and Roosevelt.
P.S. At least one liberal recognizes the dangers of government-subsidized dependency.
This wagon seems to be getting heavier.
With obamma and the Rats extending unemployment benefits, why work?
“With obamma and the Rats extending unemployment benefits, why work?”
I’m on unemployment. It essentially covers 80% of food and fuel. I have no car payment or house payment. If you have either of those you’d burn through your savings at a high rate.
Obama, by the way, is the reason I’m unemployed. But back in the 90’s I was unemployed by Clinton. Democrats are bad for employment, period.

I am leery about stats like this....because it will be used to push Illegal Alien Amnesty and special immigration laws...which will further wreck our economy and employment
A lot of folks not being counted are those who no longer collect unemployment, but still are looking for work...and not on welfare
We need to create jobs in America for Americans...and neither party wants to do this. They are happier with Free Trade, Welfare, Illegal Alien Amnesty, Food Stamps...the pillars of Economic Anti-Americanism
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That's because 0bama is whipping you to go faster;
0bama has steered the wagon onto a steeper road;
All of 0bama's Green Initiatives have sent the wagon into a severe headwind;
Of course there could be other, physically legit reasons.
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