Analysis-Flatlining participation, rising wages leave Fed employment
puzzle unresolved
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[November 08, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal
Reserve's hoped-for surge of people into the U.S. job market fell short
again in October, with the labor force participation rate now flat for
15 months and continued broad wage gains reflecting what's become
perhaps the key supply "bottleneck" for the central bank.
Average hourly earnings rose 4.9% on an annual basis in October, the
most since March and continuing a pandemic-era rise in wages the Fed is
watching for its possible effect on inflation.
(GRAPHIC: Wage change by industry pay -
https://graphics.reuters.com/
USA-ECONOMY/JOBS/
myvmnknlnpr/
chart.png)
So far the wage gains are generally welcomed by the Fed, likely to
support spending and economic growth in coming months as pandemic-era
government programs decline, and providing some evidence the central
bank's ultra-easy monetary policy is helping the least well off.
Earnings in the lower-paid leisure and hospitality industry, hardest hit
in terms of joblessness at the outset of the pandemic and still the
farthest from recovering lost employment, rose more than 11% as of
October compared to a year ago, nearly double the pace of the next
closest industry, transportation.
(GRAPHIC: The jobs hole facing Biden and the Fed -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/JOBS/jbyprzlrqpe/
chart.png)
But an otherwise strong October employment report, with 531,000 jobs
added, came with a footnote: Growth in the labor force moved sideways
again, foiling the Fed's hopes that people would return to jobs or begin
actively seeking work in larger numbers. Since August of 2020 the labor
force participation rate has ranged between 61.4% and 61.7%, making
little headway back to the pre-pandemic level of 63.4% that policymakers
have set their sights on.
(GRAPHIC: Labor market progress -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/FEDPROGRESS/
yzdvxmmmdpx/chart.png)
October's rate was 61.6%, unchanged from September.
Unless that improves, wrote Capital Economics Senior U.S. Economist
Michael Pearce, wages are likely to continue higher and the Fed left
open to the risk that "maximum employment" may arrive sooner, with a
lower-than-anticipated level of jobs.
"There was absolutely no sign of a pick-up in labor supply. That
suggests the sharp acceleration in wage growth in recent months has
further to run," Pearce said. Fed officials are "arguing that
participation rates will rebound as virus fears and caregiving burdens
ease. But with growth in the labor force muted even as case numbers drop
back, we're increasingly worried that the big drop in participation over
the past few years will prove permanent."
[to top of second column] |
Restaurant workers are seen inside one of the city's most popular
restaurants amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in El
Paso, Texas, U.S. November 15, 2020. REUTERS/Ivan Pierre
Aguirre/File Photo
So far Fed Chair Jerome Powell and top policymakers feel the increase in wages
is in line with changes in prices overall and labor productivity - meaning it
won't be an inflationary force on its own, and help turn what's expected to be a
temporary period of rising prices into something more persistent.
(GRAPHIC: Wages, prices and productivity - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/WAGES/gdvzydqarpw/chart.png)
Recent gains have helped narrow some of the gap in the U.S. income distribution,
bringing the leisure and hospitality industry's $19 average hourly pay a bit
closer to the nearly $31 national average, and narrowing the spread with workers
in the highest-paid and tech-influenced information industry.
(GRAPHIC: Industry wage as percent of national average -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/WAGES/
gkplgdgomvb/chart.png)
(GRAPHIC: High vs. low wage industries -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/WAGES/
klvykdgmlvg/chart.png)
The transition of the economy back to fuller reliance on private earnings will
also be key to sustaining U.S. growth that Fed officials and economists expect
to accelerate now that the pandemic is easing again.
An Atlanta Fed real-time tracker for quarterly economic growth for the rest of
2021 jumped Friday to 8.5% from 8.2% after news U.S. companies added 531,000
jobs in October, a pace that shows an easing of pandemic concerns and which
could make up the job market's remaining lost ground sometime next year.
The unemployment rate of 4.6% is now just 1.1 percentage points above the 3.5%
mark hit at the start of the pandemic, and has clawed back more than 90% of the
surge in the spring of 2020 when it spiked to 14.8%.
"Wages have been moving up strongly, very strongly...It's very important, and
it's generally a good thing," Powell said last week after the Fed's latest
policy meeting.
But the Fed has now tied its policy, and any increase in interest rates from the
current near-zero level, to reaching "maximum employment." That's a concept the
central bank has not quantified but is judging against an array of statistics
including the behavior of labor force participation and wages.
The two influence each other, and Powell this week acknowledged that the lack of
improvement in the numbers of people working or actively looking for work has
surprised him.
As the infections from the coronavirus Delta variant subsided "we thought that
schools reopening and elapsing unemployment benefits would produce some sort of
additional labor supply. That doesn't seem to have been the case," he said.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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