April Employment Report

By Paul Gomme and Peter Rupert

The BLS announced that payroll employment rose by 175,000. In addition, the BLS revised down previous estimates by a total of 22,000, down 34,000 in February but up 12,000 in March. Expectations by professional economists were in the 240,000 range. The slowing was evident pretty much across the board as can be seen in the charts below.

Employment gains in retail and health care, however, remained about the same over the last several months.

Temporary help services have been on a steady decline over the past two years, with only January this year showing an increase.

Average weekly hours of work fell from 34.4 to 34.3, leading to a decline in total hours of work.

The household survey showed an increase of 85,000 in the number employed, 63,000 more unemployed and no change in the labor force participation rate. The unemployment rate rose slightly from 3.83% to 3.86%.

Policy Outlook

The stock market shot up due to several events that occurred over the past week: Q1 GDP, PCE price index, Fed announcement after their meeting and today the employment report. We commented on the GDP and PCE price index reports here. Q1 GDP came in somewhat lower than expected and the PCE price index showed continued inflation pressures. Our bottom line was that while it may have slightly increased the probability of upcoming rate cuts, inflation was still stubbornly high. Indeed the FOMC statement contained the following comment, “The Committee does not expect it will be appropriate to reduce the target range until it has gained greater confidence that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2 percent.” Evidently, there has been no recent progress to that end.

Today’s jobs report seems to have the market increasing the odds of a rate cut by summer’s end. The WSJ called it “goldilocks job report for the Fed.” Does a downtick in employment lead to an imminent recession?

To “see through” the effects of the pandemic recession, we removed a set observations from March to September 2020, since those effects were massive. In the figure, months during which the NBER determined the economy was in an expansion, and for which the monthly employment change was less than 175,000 are marked with red dots. There’s a lot of red dots. Looking at periods when the economy did well for a prolonged period of time, 1960s, 1990s, 2010s, the current job numbers look similar. Staring at this figure, it’s difficult to put a lot of credence in the notion that low job gains precede recessions. Or, to borrow a phrase, low job gains have predicted 9 of the last 3 recessions.

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