Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Workforce, Population, Jobs by Age-Group
- Germany Accuses US of Spying on Merkel’s Phone; Merkel Phones Obama; Why Should Any Country Trust the US?
- Measuring What Didn't Happen: Did Obamacare Cause an Increase in Part-Time Jobs? No Says Ritholtz, and Reuters; Yes, Says Mish
- ECB President Mario Draghi Announces New Stress Tests; Translating "Draghize"
Workforce, Population, Jobs by Age-Group Posted: 23 Oct 2013 07:53 PM PDT Here are a few demographic-related charts of the workforce, civilian non-institutional population, and jobs, by age-group, from reader Tim Wallace. Change in the Number of Jobs Since 1970 Civilian Non-Institution Population Since 1970 Workforce Since 1970 Percent of Population in Workforce Since 1970 Number in Age Group Employed Percent of Age Group Employed Since 1970 Wallace writes ... Mish, The attached charts are eye openers. Graph 1 Comments The first chart shows the change in the number of jobs and the population since 2007. It shows us that in the 16-19 age group the population has shrunk by 239,000, while the number of jobs in this age group has shrunk by 1,415,000! In the 20-24 age group the population has grown by 1,625,000 while the number of jobs has shrunk by 362,000. For the under 25 age group we have 1,777,000 less jobs with 1,386,000 more people. In the 25-54 age group that everyone always focuses on, we see a loss in population of 1,382,000 people since August of 2007, but an even greater loss in jobs - 5,940,000! Add to this the loss of 1,777,000 up above and we see the 16-54 age groups have lost 7,717,000 jobs since 2007. And, the population has basically been flat. Since 2007 we have added 13,745,000 people to the population over age 55. We have also added 5,820,000 to the number employed in that age bracket. Jobs were lost in every age bracket except the 55+, with 16-19 dropping 22.6%, 20-24 falling 2.6%, 25-54 going down 5.9% and 55+ going UP 22.7%! Graph 2 Comments The second graph shows the Civilian Non-Institutional Population by age - note the basic flat lines on all but 55+. The graph shows the Work Force by age - note once again only 55+ goes up. Graph 4 comments The fourth graph shows the number employed by age group. Note that only the 55+ group benefited in the current "Recovery". The other groups are all down from 2007, with 16-19 devastated. Just go in Walmart and McDonald's and you will see it first hand - senior citizen workers abound. Graph 5 comments The fifth graph shows the percentage of an age group that is employed. The percentage plunged in every age group except 55+. Graph Six Comments The last graph shows the percentage of the age group employed. It follows the exact trend of the fifth, as it must. Those in sales and marketing you should focus on the 55+ age group. Forget the teenagers, they are contributing little, and their parents are sliding fast! Those in the 20-24 hope the 55+ start to retire, but in increasing percentages, they choose not to Very interesting data, thanks to the BLS for giving us access to the ranges in the data base. As usual, all data not adjusted for seasonality, just direct comparisons of actual data year on year. Tim The charts show something I have repeatedly said since 2008: "kids will be competing with their parents and grandparents for jobs that do not pay a living wage." Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Posted: 23 Oct 2013 02:19 PM PDT The Wall Street Journal reports Berlin Says U.S. May Be Spying on Merkel's Phone BERLIN—Germany said it believed U.S. intelligence may be spying on Chancellor Angela Merkel's cellphone, an intrusion that it said would constitute a "grave breach of trust" between the longtime allies.Merkel Phones Obama The Spiegel Online reports Berlin Complains: Did US Tap Chancellor Merkel's Mobile Phone? German Chancellor Angela Merkel phoned United States President Barack Obama on Wednesday to discuss suspicions that she may have been targeted by US intelligence agencies for years, SPIEGEL has learned.Thank Whistleblower Snowden We should all thank whistleblower Edward Snowden for many of the spying revelations now coming to light. I think he is a hero. Unfortunately, as I noted in Hypocrites and Bullies Speak on "The Importance of Trust" president Obama and numerous bullies don't see it that way. Hypocrites and BulliesQuestion of Trust Why Should Any Country Trust the US? They shouldn't, and the US is to blame, not Snowden. Is this about to matter? Let's hope so. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Posted: 23 Oct 2013 11:39 AM PDT A friend sent me an article in Reuters today that claims Little evidence yet that Obamacare costing full-time jobs. One in five businesses in the service sector think President Barack Obama's signature healthcare reform has hurt employment at their firms over the last three months, a National Association of Business Economics survey showed on Monday.Did Obamacare Cause an Increase in Part-Time Jobs? Barry Ritholtz at the Big Picture Blog says "no" in his October 7 post Did Obamacare Cause an Increase in Part-Time Employment? A reader emailed the following question about this weekend's WaPo column (ObamaCare: Investing Advice for Senator Ted Cruz):Measuring What Didn't Happen For now, let's assume the above chart from the Economic Policy Institute is correct. Does that imply there was no Obamacare effect? Of course not, and Ritholtz should know better. Even if the EPI chart is correct, it does not show what would have happened had Obamacare not passed. Realistically, to determine the Obamacare effect, we need to measure what we didn't see (which is what would have happened in the absence of Obamacare). I am inclined to believe what corporate CEOs are saying given strong evidence they did what they said. Reuters reported "Many businesses polled by the NABE said they were holding back on hiring due to the costs imposed by the law. The survey also showed 15 percent of service sector firms planned to shift to more part-time workers due to Obamacare." There is massive evidence that businesses increased part-time hiring due to Obamacare. There is massive evidence of other economic distortions as well. Obamacare Economic Distortion Synopsis OK Mish, Why Doesn't the EPI Chart Support Your Case?
Let's explore point number three. Please consider a chart of BLS data, taken from the St. Louis Fed (Fred) Website. Employed, Usually Work Part Time 2000-2013 Let's hone in on that for a closer look. Employed, Usually Work Part Time 2008-2013 Questions and Answers Q.What would the chart look like without Obamacare? A. Better Q. Was the Obamcare hiring effect delayed until 2012? A. Probable. That is when CEOs started complaining. That is when numerous restaurants cut back hours. Q. Will we see BLS revisions that make the reported data look worse? A. Probable Q. Does the Economic Policy Institute chart reflect reality? A. The chart from the St. Louis Fed is a closer approximation, but revisions are likely Q. Has Obamacare actually caused an increase in part-time employment? A. Absolutely. That is what the chart suggests (even before expected BLS revisions). That is what CEOs say. And that is what plain common sense suggests in the first place (even though we will not understand the full impact for years, if ever). Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
ECB President Mario Draghi Announces New Stress Tests; Translating "Draghize" Posted: 23 Oct 2013 08:06 AM PDT When it comes to stress tests, especially for European banks, the one thing history suggests is the tests will be essentially stress-free, by design. Why should this time be any different? Nonetheless, European Central Bank President, Mario Draghi Says ECB Won't Hesitate to Fail Banks in Stress Tests. Translating Draghize For those of you who do not speak Draghize I offer these translations. Draghize: "Banks do need to fail to prove the credibility of the exercise". Mish: We are carefully scrutinizing several non-critical banks, looking for a couple of scapegoats, hoping to fool the public regarding the credibility of the exercise. Draghize: "If they do have to fail, they have to fail. There's no question about that." Mish: If any big banks are in trouble. They won't fail. There's no question about that. Draghize: "The test is credible because the ultimate purpose of it is to restore or strengthen private sector confidence in the soundness of the banks, in the quality of their balance sheets" Mish: The test is credible because we say it is. ECB Executive Board member Joerg Asmussen: "This is our third and last chance to restore confidence after two previous stress tests by the EBA failed to do so." Mish: We are praying this stress test does not blow sky high as fast as the last two did. Draghize: "The region's governments will be ready to fill any capital holes that emerge as a result of the stress tests." Mish: The region's governments are totally unprepared to fill any capital holes that emerge as a result of the stress tests. Draghize: "I have no doubt whatsoever that backstops will be there - - which doesn't mean that they will have to be used because first and foremost it's private money that needs to be used. There's an explicit commitment to have in place proper, adequate national backstops by the time the exercise is being carried out." Mish: Bondholders will not suffer as a result of any capital shortages in our hand-picked failures. If anyone needs to suffer, it will, as usual, be taxpayers. Draghize: "A substantial amount of private capital has been raised so we're not starting from scratch but certainly, it's the beginning of a new way of doing things." Mish: We are starting from scratch. Private capital is inadequate. This is of course why the tests must essentially be stress-free. To help explain why there will not be any capital shortfalls, please see New Rules for Italy Banks "I'll Guarantee Your Derivatives If You Guarantee Mine" Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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