Few people missed the headlines when the latest employment
figures were unveiled earlier this month by the U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics. The addition of only 32,000 new jobs, or 200,000
fewer than expected, alarmed everyone. Stocks swooned, reporters
wrote economic obituaries and President Bush's political opponents
crowed.
But hardly anyone noticed a new study, published the same day by
the same federal agency, that shows payroll job losses have been
consistently overestimated since the 2001 recession. How can this
be? The problem lies in the way we measure jobs.
The BLS has two ways to do that. One is the payroll survey, which
charts the number of jobs that employers report to the government.
It shows we've lost 1.24 million jobs since March 2001 (including
the 32,000 in July). The second is the household survey, in which
the Census Bureau queries Americans directly about their job
status. It shows we've added 1.81 million jobs since March 2001,
including 629,000 last month. Why the discrepancy?
Part of the reason is that the payroll survey overlooks some
segments of workers that have been growing in today's economy -
such as the self-employed and consultants. None of these show up on
payrolls. The economy is structurally different than it was five or
10 years ago, and it may be that the payroll-jobs numbers are weak
simply because the economy now relies less on payrolls for engaging
the labor force.
But the new BLS study now acknowledges another reason:
job-changing.
When workers change jobs, they wind up being counted twice in the
payroll survey - as employees for their former and new employers.
When turnover rates are high, as they were in the late 1990s, it
looks as if there are many more jobs than there actually are. But
when turnover declines, as it has since 9/11, the jobs figure is
closer to reality. Thus, some jobs are cited as "lost" when, in
fact, employees have merely stayed at the same jobs.
And there's a third reason to suspect that the payroll survey isn't
serving us well: Other economic indicators point to recovery. Real
wages are rising. Unemployment is low and declining. (Indeed, the
same day the 32,000 figure came out, the unemployment rate was
reported to have dropped from 5.6% to 5.5%.) Jobless claims have
been declining for the last year and are holding at about 340,000 a
week. Levels below 400,000 are widely perceived to reflect a
healthy, growing workforce.
There's more. The last few months also have brought much-needed
relief to long-term unemployed workers. The number in this group
declined by more than 300,000 workers since March. And the length
of unemployment dropped sharply in July to 8.9 weeks from 10.8
weeks in June.
Critics note that the household survey's employment level varies
widely from one month to the next. However, variability isn't
caused, as is so often charged, by the small sample size. It's
caused by the fresh faces in the sample - 15,000 new respondents
per month. Over the long term, the instability disappears, and
trend lines are clear. Not only is employment growing by millions,
but the labor force is too.
Now for the question of scale: How much does job-changing distort
payrolls? The BLS says it overstated payroll job losses by a
quarter of a million, but it uses cautious assumptions. And let's
not forget the fact that payrolls overlook many workers, as
mentioned above. As a result, the study from BLS offers the lowest
possible estimate of the overstated job losses. Its acknowledgment
is just the tip of the iceberg.
But does it really matter how big the hole is in the side of the
Titanic? The point is, the payroll survey is now officially
suspect. At the very least, it shouldn't be viewed as superior to
the other sources of economic data. Analysts have little choice but
to reevaluate all their economic assumptions.
For now, though, the household survey should be seen as the
standard for long-term analysis, and payrolls should be kept in
perspective. If the economy is going to take center stage in the
political debate, we need to ensure we're arguing from accurate
figures. Thanks to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, we're getting
closer to doing just that.
Kane is a research fellow in the Center for Data Analysis at The Heritage Foundation. He is a veteran Air Force intelligence officer, and former San Diego software entrepreneur.
First appeared in The Los Angeles Times