U.S. labor market worse than it appears,
Fed paper suggests
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[June 02, 2021]
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - U.S. labor
market signals are conflicting to an "unprecedented" degree, but those
suggesting labor market slack should be given more weight than those
pointing to tightness, according a paper published Monday by the San
Francisco Federal Reserve Bank. |
San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President Mary Daly poses at the
bank’s headquarters in San Francisco, California, U.S., July 16, 2019.
REUTERS/Ann Saphir |
The
paper looked at 26 labor market measures that typically move in
tandem and found that during the current recovery they are
giving wildly divergent signals about the health of the job
market.
The job openings rate, for instance, suggests the job market is
much tighter than the unemployment rate; the labor force
participation rate points to much more slack than detected in
the unemployment rate.
Because the pandemic has forced so many people out of the
workforce, "negative signals such as the low labor force
participation rate provide a better read than do the positive
signals," the researchers argued. "Overall, our findings reveal
that the labor market situation is worse than some headline
numbers suggest."
U.S. central bankers are debating how tight the U.S. labor
market has become amid widespread reports from employers about
hiring difficulties even as the economy still has 8 million
fewer people working than before the pandemic.
The question matters because the Fed says it could start
reducing its support for the economy once inflation and the
labor market have made "substantial further progress" toward the
Fed's goals of 2% inflation and maximum employment. It hasn't,
however, laid out exactly how it will measure that progress.
The U.S. unemployment rate was 6.1% in April and a reading for
May is due out on Friday.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
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