Nonfarm payroll employment continued to trend up in November (94,000), and the unemployment rate held at 4.7 percent, the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor reported today. Job growth continued in professional and technical services, health care, and food services. Employment continued to decline in manufacturing and also fell in several housing-related industries, including construction, credit intermediation, and real estate. Average hourly earnings rose by 8 cents over the month.Report Highlights
- Nonfarm Employment +94,000
- Total Private +64,000
- Goods Producing -33,000
- Construction -24,000
- Manufacturing -11,000
- Service Providing +127,000
Once again I will point out that the statement "Nonfarm payroll employment continued to trend up..." is quite a bit of cheerleading for such a weak number. +94,000 does not come close to keeping up with the birth rate and immigration. It takes close to 150,000 to do that. In addition, government jobs added 30,000 to the total. This is not a good sign. We need to get rid of bloated government jobs, not add to them.
Birth Death Model Adds 51,000 Jobs
click on chart for sharper image
The above CES Net Birth/Death Model Chart is from the BLS with my highlights.
The above chart shows construction jobs are finally back in this solar system after a long orbit somewhere beyond Pluto.
For 9 consecutive months the BLS assumed that new unaccounted construction businesses were created in this environment where business capex spending has been weak, housing has been horrid, and close to 200 lenders have gone out of business or stopped writing loans according to Implode-O-Meter.
There is still a lot of catching up to do on those construction assumptions. Eventually we will see higher negative revisions in the months to come.
However, I am still struggling with 11 consecutive months of birth death additions to financial services in light of imploded lending. Even though "imploded" does not imply out of business, the number of small 1-5 person shops that have ceased doing mortgage related business has to be staggering. Those numbers are not reflected in Implode-O-Meter stats or in the birth/death model revisions.
All things considered, the Birth Death revisions continue to remain in Bizarro World with the model adding 1,239,000 jobs to the economy since February. I do not believe it and neither does the treasury market.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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