Tag Archives: number

TIME: Rising Unemployment Rate Is Good News

The following headline appeared at Time.com shortly after the release of Friday’s jobs report: What’s Good About Rising Unemployment What should jump out at the eagle-eyed reader is that headline didn’t end with a question mark. Time senior writer Stephen Gandel was actually making the case that the rising unemployment rate was good news. Watch just how far a liberal media member is willing to go today to make economic data look favorable for the Party currently in power, and imagine the unlikelihood of such a thing happening if a Republican was in the White House (h/t Rusty Weiss ): The unemployment rate, probably the most famous of economic gauges, may actually be a very bad indicator of how healthy the economy is. The unemployment rate peaked in late 2009 at just above 10% and has been mostly falling ever since. But the hiring numbers, or less firing numbers, have only been improving recently. So what was going on? The unemployment rate tracks not just how many people have jobs, but how many people are looking for jobs. And, up until August, the number of people looking for jobs was dropping rapidly. Really? And just how did Gandel reach that conclusion? Here is the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ table of folks 16 and over currently out of the labor force but wanting a job now: As is plainly visible, the number of folks out of the labor force but wanting work has been fluctuating between 5.61 million and 6.31 million since last August. It did experience a large drop in May, but has pretty much been rising since and is now basically where it was in April and January. As such, claiming that “up until August, the number of people looking for jobs was dropping rapidly” is utter nonsense not supported by the data. In fact, this number is basically right back to where it was last September. With that in mind, let’s continue: When people give up looking for work, essentially giving up on the economy, that indicates a really bad drop in confidence, something a recovery feeds on. So the reason the unemployment rate was rising has less to do with more people getting jobs, and more to do with fewer people looking. Is this really a senior writer?  Let’s walk through that last sentence again: “So the reason the unemployment rate was rising has less to do with more people getting jobs…” Huh? The unemployment rate is a simple arithmetic equation whereby the number of people unemployed is divided by the number of people considered part of the labor force.  Using data just released Friday, there are currently 14.86 million people considered unemployed. The labor force is 154.11 million. This produces an unemployment rate of 9.64 percent. Now, when people get jobs, the number considered unemployed declines reducing the numerator and therefore decreasing the unemployment rate. As such, to claim rising unemployment has less to do with more people getting jobs makes absolutely no sense. On the other hand, the final part of that sentence “and more to do with fewer people looking” needs to be addressed. “Discouraged workers” – those out of the labor force but wanting a job – can have a huge impact on the unemployment rate. The way these numbers are calculated, you are only considered unemployed and part of the labor force if you’re actively looking for work. As such, when folks give up their search, it reduces the number of unemployed and the labor force by an equal amount. Once again going back to simple arithmetic, a decrease in the numerator and denominator by an equal amount results in a lower ratio. 2 divided by 3 equals .67; 1 divided by 2 equals .5. With this in mind, the unemployment rate can decline simply by discouraged job seekers ending their search. This has happened a number of times in the past few years. Conversely, discouraged workers re-entering the labor force can cause the unemployment rate to rise. An increase in the numerator and denominator by equal amounts produces a higher result. Gandel claimed this is what happened last month: According to today’s report, 550,000 people entered the workforce in August. That’s a huge jump of new people looking for work, either because they haven’t worked before or because they decided that this was the month to get back off the couch and start looking. With that many people entering the workforce, the fact that the unemployment number only rose 0.1% is quite a good thing. In fact, more than half of those people who began looking for work in August, or 290,000, landed a job in August.  I agree that this this could be good news, but not necessarily for the same reason. To make the case that the big jump in the labor force in August was even partially due to discouraged workers starting to look for work again goes against the data as the number of people out of the labor force and wanting work now increased by 86,000. It goes without saying that if this huge increase in the labor force was caused by discouraged workers re-entering it, the number of discouraged workers wanting work should have declined. But that’s not what happened. Instead, it appears the August data might have been confounded by seasonalities and the associated adjustments. As employment watchers are painfully aware, there are seasonal changes in the jobs market that make for wild shifts in the numbers depending on the month. The summer is a particularly volatile period with teachers out of work, students taking part-time jobs, and graduates getting full-time positions. To smooth out the data, the Labor Department makes adjustments to the raw figures each month; the headline numbers are always “seasonally adjusted.” However, these manipulations at times present a peculiar picture of the labor market. As Gandel correctly pointed out: It is possible that coming at the end of the summer an uptick in people looking for work is not as positive as it appears. This is the time of year, after two hot months, when recent graduates start to actually think about their future and send out resumes. And you can image many other out of work people deciding to take off looking for a job in the summer. In August, with the summer ending, some of those people started looking again in earnest. Exactly. As such, the uptick in the labor force might have had little to do with discouraged workers beginning a new search as he suggested earlier.  In fact, the unadjusted data actually showed a 600,000 decline in the labor force as well as an almost 400,000 decrease in the number of people unemployed. This means the August data could easily be confounded by seasonalities and their related adjustments thereby offering a fuzzy picture about what any of this means going forward. This is not to say Friday’s report wasn’t better than expected. Over the past couple of weeks, signs had been pointing to a much worse economic conditions leading analysts to ratchet down their estimates for these numbers. As a result, what the BLS released Friday was certainly better than the gloomiest predictions out there. But, calling this clearly mixed bag “good news” should be left to the administration and the Party currently controlling Congress and not so depicted by a so-called journalist.   This seems especially true given that these exact same numbers would certainly not have been reported with such optimism when George W. Bush was in the White House. Or have you forgotten the media’s favorite economic term during his presidency “jobless recovery?”

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TIME: Rising Unemployment Rate Is Good News

Curious Whales Check Out Photographers with Stunning Results (Slideshow)

Photo via The Daily Mail The ocean’s whales are some of the Earth’s most massive and majestic animals, reaching sizes of up to 80 feet long and 150 tons. As the targets of centuries of whaling, they have a violent history — and are still recovering from an industry that depleted their numbers substantially. But while whales can be aggressive at times, they are more often gentle, curious creatures — and likely to check out foreign objects in the water, including boats and photographers.

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Curious Whales Check Out Photographers with Stunning Results (Slideshow)

Dual-Flush Toilet Retrofit, With Adjustable Flush (Video)

Image credit: Brondell Simple Flush Dual-flush toilets have always been popular here on TreeHugger. After all, it seems insane to use the same amount of drinking water to flush your number ones as your number twos. (It actually seems insane to use drinking water at all, but that’s another story.) But rather than just advocating ripping out your old fixture—we’ve always been keen on adapting your old throne. From the

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Dual-Flush Toilet Retrofit, With Adjustable Flush (Video)

Weekend Receipts: Satan Wins By A Nose, Takers Takes Second Place

It was a real horse race at the box office this weekend as the demon-possessed country bumpkin of The Last Exorcism edged out the smooth criminals from Takers for the number one slot. And meanwhile not a whole lot of people were making the return trip to Pandora as Avatar ‘s re-release landed outside the top ten. Grab your crucifix and your favorite porkpie hat, your weekend receipts are here.

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Weekend Receipts: Satan Wins By A Nose, Takers Takes Second Place

Egg recall 2010 list

The egg recall was voluntarily initiated by Wright County Eggs, based in Galt, Iowa. The company says the suspect eggs come in packages stamped with one of these three plant numbers: P1026, P1413 and P1946. The way to tell if your eggs are part of the recall is to check the end of your egg carton. If it#39;s stamped with one of those three numbers (the P stands for plant), then look carefully at the number that follows. If it falls anywhere between 136 to 225 (the 136th day of the year fell on

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Egg recall 2010 list

Gingrich: Dems Teach The Unemployed To Prefer Government-Funded Poverty Over Honest Work | Political Correction

In an email to supporters yesterday, Newt Gingrich blamed Democrats for high unemployment and argued that “the extension of unemployment benefits has given people a perverse incentive to stay on unemployment rather than accept a job.” Gingrich cynically warns that Democrats are making jobless Americans “get so used to being unproductive that they are willing to accept welfare indefinitely instead of taking a job.” Gingrich is just the latest in a long line of Republicans to attack the unemployed for political gain. In reality, unemployment checks average about $300 per week, and cherry-picked anecdotes about “indefinite welfare” ignore the real source of high unemployment: a severe economic crisis brought about by Republican mismanagement. Gingrich: Companies Aren't Finding Qualified Hires And It's The Democrats' Fault Gingrich Cited Wall Street Journal Article In Arguing American Workers Prefer Unemployment Checks Over Wages. In an email to Human Events subscribers, Gingrich wrote: An article in the Wall Street Journal Monday painted a frustrating picture of the joblessness situation, showing that, despite our high unemployment, many firms are having trouble filling job openings. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, if job openings were getting filled at a normal rate, the unemployment rate would be 6.8% instead of 9.5%. So there are actually many jobs out there that need to be filled. Yet, in the worst recession since the Great Depression, many employers can't make hires. The article cites several reasons for this phenomenon, a few of which are long term trends such as our education system not producing enough qualified engineers. But others factors fall squarely on the backs of this administration and Congress. For instance, the extension of unemployment benefits has given people a perverse incentive to stay on unemployment rather than accept a job. The part-owner of a machine parts company, Mechanical Devices, is looking for as many as 40 new engineers, but is quoted in the article as saying many applicants at job fairs were “just going through the motions so they could collect their unemployment checks.” The article also quotes an engineer who admits he turned down more than a dozen offers because the salary would have been less than he made on welfare. This story encapsulates the problem of the long-term unemployed. The depth and length of this recession is at risk of creating a permanent pool of unemployed Americans, who get so used to being unproductive that they are willing to accept welfare indefinitely instead of taking a job. [Gingrich Email, 8/11/10, emphasis added] Republican Lawmakers Agree With Gingrich: Unemployed Americans Are Lazy And Stubborn Below are just a few of the many examples of Republicans blaming unemployment on laziness brought on by government checks. For a more complete list, see our full fact check HERE( http://politicalcorrection.org/factcheck/201007200002 ) and read more about the GOP's rhetoric on unemployment HERE( http://politicalcorrection.org/blog/201007270004 ). Reality Check: There Are About Five Unemployed Workers For Every Job Opening… Depart Of Labor Statistics Show There Are At Least Five Job Seekers For Every Opening. According to the New York Times: In June, there were fewer than five unemployed workers for each job opening, according to new Labor Department data. That is a less discouraging ratio than earlier this year, but the improvement may mainly be a result of workers who have given up looking for a job. The chart below shows the jobless worker/job opening ratio going back to 2000, the earliest year that the Labor Department keeps data on job openings. New York Times: Ratio Of Jobs To Job Seekers Is Probably Higher Because Many Jobless Are Not Counted In The Labor Dept. Statistics. According to the New York Times: “As of June, there were 4.98 workers per opening, compared with 5.09 the previous month. Both the number of job openings and the number of unemployed workers fell from May to June. The number of unemployed workers fell not because more people got jobs, but because hundreds of thousands of people dropped out of the labor force. In fact the labor force participation rate – that is, the portion of working-age people who choose to work or actively search for work – is currently at its lowest rate since 1984.” [New York Times, 8/11/10, emphasis added] …And Economists Agree: Unemployment Benefits Have A Tiny Effect On Unemployment Duration Key Researcher On Unemployment Benefits Says His Old Findings On Unemployment Benefits Are Outdated. According to the bipartisan Joint Economic Committee: “While earlier research suggested that the unemployment insurance program in the 1970s and 1980s had important disincentive effects, the current consensus is that these dated studies overstated the effects of unemployment insurance benefits on job search behavior. The older studies noted a jump in the fraction of workers who found a job just before they exhausted their benefits. In contrast, in testimony before the Joint Economic Committee, the author of one of the seminal papers in this earlier wave of research, Dr. Lawrence Katz, said that 'the most compelling research shows only modest impacts of UI extensions on the search effort and duration of unemployment of unemployment insurance recipients.' Katz pointed out that these studies overstate the overall impact of unemployment insurance benefits on the length of unemployment spells 'by ignoring the spillover effects of shorter unemployment spells for the other unemployed workers not receiving UI benefits.'” [“Does Unemployment Insurance Inhibit Job Search?” Joint Economic Committee, July 2010, emphasis added] added by: toyotabedzrock

More Unexpected Economic News, But Only If You’re an Economist in D.C.

Bad economic news just keeps piling up. Today, the news about jobless claims from the AP : Initial requests for jobless benefits rose last week to their highest level since April, a sign that hiring remains weak and some companies are still cutting workers. The Labor Department said Thursday that new claims for unemployment insurance rose by 19,000 to a seasonally adjusted 479,000. Analysts had expected a small drop. Claims have risen twice in the past three weeks. Surprise! And then, there’s Gallup’s small business indicator which would portend bad news in the next year: The Wells Fargo/Gallup Small Business Index – which measures small-business owners’ perceptions of six measures of their current operating environment and future expectations – fell 17 points to -28 in July. This is its lowest level since the index’s inception in August 2003. (See full index results on page 2.) That means, of course, that business are contracting and not expanding and therefore will not be hiring and may be firing. Here’s the thing: The bank bailouts delayed the inevitable. Every Friday afternoon, more bank failures are mentioned. And big business and big banks have been propped up, and favored, and the small guys suffer. Oh, and don’t forget social security. NPR has this rosy report : “Social Security is set to run a $41 billion deficit excluding interest income due to the downturn and corrections of excess revenue created to trust funds in past years, the first shortfall since 1983,” Reuters reports. Their combined assets of those trust funds “will be exhausted in 2037,” when the number of beneficiaries will surpass the number of workers who pay into program. What happens then? “At that time, there will be sufficient tax revenue coming in to pay about 78 percent of benefits,” the Social Security Board of Trustees says. It also projects “that the program costs will exceed tax revenues in 2010 and 2011, be less than tax revenues in 2012 and 2014, and then permanently exceed tax revenues beginning 2015, one year earlier than estimated in last year’s report.” The outlook is so grim, in part, because of the economic recession, the board reports. The Democrats are in a bind. They want to expand government at the exact time when there is no money to do so. They want to restructure America into a socialist dream just as the demographics spell implosion and permanent mediocrity should their dream be fulfilled. Americans are still waking up to the “grim reality”. I’m not sure they’ve grasped what it will mean for them. They are cutting back and being prudent in these tough times, unlike the government which makes them more in touch with reality than the Democrats. Crossposted at Liberty Pundits .

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More Unexpected Economic News, But Only If You’re an Economist in D.C.

Manchester United New Jersey 2011

Manchester United is one of the United Kingdom#39;s most famed football clubs and highly popular around the world. In Indonesia itself the number of “MU” fans can easily outnumber the combination of all local football fans from the other British football clubs. AON, a leading provider of risk management services, insurance and reinsurance brokerage, intends to make a mutual beneficial synergy with Manchester United (MU) soccer group by sponsoring a new jersey for the club, a top executive told

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Manchester United New Jersey 2011

Mel Gibson Tapes Getting Worse: Enraged Actor Threatens Arson, Demands Oral Sex

In the latest of four Mel Gibson tapes to leak online, the disturbed star demands oral sex from girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva, then threatens to burn her house down. Even funnier? We’re pretty sure she’s living in one of his houses. The fourth Mel Gibson tirade , released just hours ago, is on par with the first three in terms of rage, but slightly more amusing in terms of what he’s fired up about. Upset that she refused sex in favor of sleep, Gibson screams: “I deserve to be blown first! … I’ll burn the goddamn house up, but blow me first! How dare you!??!” It’s a valid point … if you’re criminally insane. At another point in the terrifying argument, Mel says: “I should’ve woken you up and said f*%king blow me b!tch! I should’ve f*%king woken you up and said blow me! You would’ve liked that better, yeah? But you need goddamn sleep!” When Grigorieva asks for the number of his therapist, he angrily retorts: “You wanted the number of my therapist? Don’t you ever speak to him! Find your own goddamn therapist! Because you’ve got problems more than me!” “You gotta push my f*%king buttons. And it’s not going to work with us! It’s not! I can’t get like this anymore. You’re a liar and you’re dishonest and you’re f*%ked up! So you stay the f*%k away from me … I better have my daughter!” Umm … yeah . On the plus side, at least he didn’t threaten to kill her or make racial slurs . The previous rants had that covered. Mel remains under investigation for domestic violence and locked in a bitter custody battle with Oksana over 8-month-old Lucia. Follow the jump to listen to his latest profane, NSFW outburst … Mel Gibson Tape #4: I’ll Burn The House Down!

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Mel Gibson Tapes Getting Worse: Enraged Actor Threatens Arson, Demands Oral Sex

In California, the Prius Loses its Privilege

Image credit: Marcin Wichary /Flickr For years, owners of hybrid cars like the Toyota Prius enjoyed a special privilege: The free use of HOV-reserved lanes anytime of the day, regardless of the number of passengers. Thanks to new legislation signed by the Governor, however, this will change on December 31, 2010…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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In California, the Prius Loses its Privilege