Monday, February 9, 2009

long-term unemployment is also up a lot

From the NY Times:


February 9, 2009, 2:49 pm

Job Losses Are Scarier Now

I’ve been looking at the unemployment numbers that came out Friday, and a couple of things stand out.

Even though unemployment is rising rapidly — meaning there are a lot of people losing their jobs — long-term unemployment is also up a lot. Here are a couple of comparisons to illustrate that.

Highest overall unemployment rate in each downturn:
Current: 7.6%
2001-03: 6.3%
1990-92: 7.8%
1980-82: 10.8%
1973-75: 9.0%

Highest rate of unemployment for more than 15 weeks, as percentage of labor force:
Current: 3.0%
2001-03: 2.5%
1990-92: 2.9%
1980-82: 4.2%
1973-75: 3.1%

Over all, the jobless rate is below the early-1990s peak, but the rate of longer-term unemployment is higher.

Here is another interesting change in the nature of unemployment. In the early recessions of the post-World War II period, a much larger proportion of the unemployed were laid off from jobs that they could expect to get back when the economy recovered. Now, that proportion is down sharply.

But the percentage of unemployed who lost jobs, with no expectation of retaining the old job, is at the highest level since the government started collecting that data in 1967. It is reasonable to think those people are more worried, and less willing to spend, than are those who feel sure it is just a matter of time before they get back to their old jobs.

Here’s the current breakdown of the unemployed, by cause:

Lost job, other than layoff, 48.5%
Layoff, 12.6%
Left job voluntarily, 8.0%
Returning to labor force, 24.1%
New to labor force, 6.8%

(It is worth noting that the word layoff is used in its traditional sense — a temporary job loss until business improves. Many companies now use the word layoff to mean any firing, or at least any firing that is not for cause. Those “laid off” workers are counted in these numbers as “other than layoff.”)

The cyclical peak for the proportion of unemployed who lost their jobs for reasons other than layoffs were:

2001-03: 43.6%
1991-92: 44.9%
1980-82: 43.2%
1973-75: 36.3%

This is a secular change in the economy, and one that helps to explain why consumer fears can be much greater than they were when the overall unemployment rate was higher."

Me:

Part of what’s happening seems to be a shifting of employment away from the bubble industries. However, I also believe that there has been a Proactivity Run, with employers proactively shedding workers in anticipation of a deep bottom. In a way, this is like the so-called Paradox Of Thrift, in that decisions that make sense for an individual business hurt the overall economy. The Proactivity Run also explains the current rise in productivity, since the layoffs are outpacing the drop in demand.

Going forward, it is very possible that laying off so many workers is going to hurt businesses when the economy starts to turn. However, the worst news is that this Proactivity Run, a part of Fisher’s Debt-Deflation, has been going on since the middle of November, and getting a bit worse. That means that we are currently losing to Debt-Deflation, which is what we are purportedly trying to avoid. Whatever we’ve done so far hasn’t worked. That’s very bad news.

— Don the libertarian Democrat

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