No labor cavalry coming to Fed's rescue, as data moves the other way
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[December 08, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The movement of people into and out of the U.S.
labor force, a complex flow typically involving more than 12 million
people monthly, has shifted against the U.S. Federal Reserve's hope that
a rising supply of workers will help cool inflation.
The COVID-19 pandemic led to a massive dislocation in the U.S. job
market, with tens of millions at least temporarily unemployed, some
people sidelined due to health or family care problems, and others
choosing to retire.
Fed policymakers initially expected those distortions would disappear
over time and different measures of the labor market, particularly the
share of the population that is either employed or looking for a job,
return to roughly where they were.
Instead 2022 turned into a lost year. November's labor force
participation rate of 62.1% was almost exactly where it was in January,
with little variation in between. It remains 1.3 percentage points below
where it was before the pandemic, representing about 3.4 million people.
"It has been very disappointing and a little bit surprising," Fed Chair
Jerome Powell said last week, acknowledging the constraints that a
slow-growing labor force pose for the economy, and by extension for the
Fed. Fewer workers means less potential output, which means more effort
will be needed by the Fed, through higher interest rates, to bring
demand down to levels the economy can sustain.
Among the many confounding developments in a year when the Fed raced to
catch up with an outbreak of inflation, the behavior of the labor force
has been among the most perplexing and in some ways most troubling for
the economy's longer-term prospects.
The number of people available to work can increase in three ways -
young people aging into adulthood, immigration, or by adults deciding to
find a job.
Low birth rates and restricted immigration have limited the first two,
and the pandemic appears to have exhausted the third.
The U.S. labor force grew roughly 0.7% annually from 2011 through 2019,
peaking at around 164.6 million just before the pandemic, then fell
sharply at the start of the health crisis. Though it returned to the
pre-pandemic peak as of August, hitting 164.7 million, it has dipped a
bit in the last three months - effectively leaving the economy with
nearly three missing years of labor-force growth.
'SUPPLY-DEMAND LABOR IMBALANCE'
Beyond immigration and birth rates, other data has begun moving against
the Fed.
Each month millions of adults change their work status: Some join the
labor market by either accepting a job or starting a job search; others
move between a job and unemployment; some leave the labor market
altogether.
Those monthly flows are volatile, but over time the Fed was anticipating
more adults would join the labor force than would leave it.
In 2021 that was the case. On a six-month moving average basis, net
inflows to the job market climbed steadily.
In the spring of 2022, however, the trend reversed. By November the
six-month average was effectively zero, driven largely by an increase in
people both leaving employment and leaving the job market altogether,
for retirement or other reasons.
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A worker organizes empty bins during
Cyber Monday at the Amazon fulfillment center in Robbinsville
Township in New Jersey, U.S., November 28, 2022. REUTERS/Eduardo
Munoz/File Photo
Increasingly "workers leaving employment are dropping out of the
labor force, not becoming unemployed," TS Lombard economist Steven
Blitz wrote recently. Recent changes in labor flow data "underscores
the Fed's concern about the supply-demand labor imbalance
underpinning inflation."
November's employment data showed continued strong payroll job and
average wage growth, a sign that workers remain in high demand.
With the supply side - the labor force - stagnant and perhaps 10
million unfilled jobs, Fed officials are concerned the stage may be
set for wage growth so strong it becomes a prime driver of continued
price pressure.
FEWER 'UNRETIREMENTS'
The payroll jobs and labor force data come from different surveys,
one of firms and one of households, and might be revised over time.
There is tension currently between the two polls, with the household
measure pointing to a weaker employment picture in particular.
But other studies have begun buttressing the idea of an economy
headed into a chronic labor shortage, a likelihood that has begun to
anchor Fed policymakers' views.
"Looking back, we can see that a significant and persistent labor
supply shortfall opened up during the pandemic," Powell said last
week. "That appears unlikely to fully close anytime soon."
Powell cited several recent analyses, including studies of how
pandemic health aftershocks, whether deaths or persistent "long-COVID"
symptoms, may have hurt the labor force, as well as the impact of
trends like an increase in retirements.
Overall, the Fed chair said the economy may be about 3.5 million
workers short of where it would have been without the pandemic.
While some of that is due to COVID, he ascribed most to an excess
number of retirements.
Though the jump in retirements was noticed early in the pandemic,
the scope has been more closely pinned down by researchers, who,
along with Fed officials, have come to view it as unlikely to
reverse.
In a paper cited by Powell, Fed economists Joshua Montes,
Christopher Smith and Juliana Dajon concluded that new population
estimates based on the 2020 Census put to rest what had seemed a
chance that "unretirements" - people moving back to jobs after
indicating they had quit for good - would help the labor force
recover.
The paper found around 2 million "excess retirements" - those that
would not have happened absent the pandemic, pushing the labor force
participation rate even lower than it would have been given the
downward pressure it is already under due to the population aging.
"We view it as unlikely...that the retired share will fall
substantially towards its pre-pandemic trend and that those who
retired early will return to the labor force in large numbers," the
researchers wrote. "It may take some years for retirement behavior
to normalize."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea
Ricci)
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