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Surprisingly Strong U.S. Employment Report For January

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Summary

  • The gain of 304,000 jobs in January nearly doubled consensus (165,000), but significant revisions to the January data seem likely.
  • The Bureau of Labor Statistics announced that the initial response rate for the Establishment Survey was just 61%, the lowest since 2008.
  • The December report also had a low initial response rate and its data was revised down sizably Friday to 222,000 from 312,000.

By Mickey D. Levy

Job growth in January 2019 was surprisingly strong with payroll gains of 304,0000 and average hourly earnings growth remaining above 3% yr/yr for the fourth consecutive month, seemingly defying mounting concerns about global economic conditions, the government shutdown, and declines in various confidence surveys.

The gain of 304,000 jobs in January nearly doubled consensus (165,000), but significant revisions to the January data seem likely. The Bureau of Labor Statistics announced that the initial response rate for the Establishment Survey was just 61%, the lowest since 2008. The December report also had a low initial response rate and its data was revised down sizably Friday to 222,000 from 312,000. Nevertheless, the final January data should continue to reflect a healthy labor market.

The unemployment rate increased to 4.0% from 3.9% in January, as Federal employees furloughed by the government shutdown are usually recorded as unemployed in the Household Survey. According to the BLS, "Among the unemployed, the number who reported being on temporary layoff increased by 175,000." This suggests that the measured number of unemployed will fall in February, lowering the unemployment rate below 4%.

The labor force participation rate continued to defy expectations, rising for the second consecutive month to 63.2% from 63.1%. It jumped to 82.6% from 82.3% for prime working-age persons, the highest since April 2010. The rising prime working-age labor force participation rate suggests that confidence in job-finding prospects remains strong and that the potential labor supply is larger and more elastic than assumed. We believe this to be the most important labor market development in recent years that explains the stronger-than-expected job growth and healthy but constrained wage gains. Fed officials are finally taking note of this important trend. The underemployment rate, a broader measure of labor market slack, jumped to 8.1% from 7.6%.

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e21: Economic Policies for the 21st Century is a Washington-based center of the nonprofit, nonpartisan Manhattan Institute dedicated to economic research and innovative public policies for the 21st century. Drawing on the expertise of practitioners, policymakers, and academics, we aim to advance free enterprise, fiscal discipline, economic growth, and the rule of law.

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Comments (1)

No recession in sight. While there's always a chance for an exogenous shock to the system (eg, War, terrorist event etc.) or a policy mistake (Trump shuts down government again, Fed raises interest rates, or China trade war heats up), the overall economy is looking really good. The bull market continues… Risk on!
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