US payrolls revised downward monthly in 2023.
Is the U.S. Economy and Labor Market Weaker Than Reported?
In recent weeks, federal agencies have announced revisions to various economic metrics, be it the gross domestic product or monthly jobs data. While there is not anything typically unusual about revisions, the frequency and size of some of the changes have turned heads in economic circles, leading to speculation that the country may not be as strong as reported.
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The labor market added 187,000 jobs in August, while the unemployment rate unexpectedly shot up to 3.8 percent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). But while the U.S. economy has added jobs for 39 consecutive months, a notable component of the latest report was the revisions.
The change in total payrolls for June was adjusted down by 80,000 to 105,000. The initial estimate showed that the labor market created 209,000 jobs. Because of the revision, June represented the worst jobs report since December 2020.
July employment figures were revised down by 30,000 to 157,000.
In the first seven months of 2023, employment revisions have totaled 355,000. The country has not witnessed six consecutive months of downward revisions outside of recessions since the peak of the 2007 housing bubble.
“Monthly revisions result from additional reports received from businesses and government agencies since the last published estimates and from the recalculation of seasonal factors,” the BLS notes.
Peter Schiff, the chief economist and global strategist at Euro Pacific Capital, says this is “not random.”
“Every 2023 #jobs report has been revised significantly lower,” he wrote on X, the social media outlet previously known as Twitter.
“Seven downward revisions in a row is not random. The labor department has been consistently overestimating job growth. No doubt that today’s August 187,000 job number will also be revised significantly lower next month.”
The BLS confirmed in a separate report that the U.S. jobs market was slower than reported in the 12 months ending in March 2023.
According to the annual benchmark review of payroll data, U.S. employment growth was revised lower by 306,000, representing roughly 25,000 fewer net jobs per month in this 12-month period.
Private sector job creation was adjusted lower by 358,000, while government payrolls were revised up by 52,000.
The overall benchmark revision totaled negative 0.2 percent, below the decade average of 0.1 percent.
“The deterioration is large. The significantly large revisions make me nervous. It distorts the kind of view we have and how much we’ve slowed over the last several plus months,” said CNBC personality Rick Santelli.
But St. Louis Fed economists purport that ”deviations should average out to zero over time.”
“In short, revisions to the monthly payroll employment estimates may be useful guides to the near-term strength or weakness of the economy, but should be considered within the context of overall economic conditions,” they wrote.
Will the August payrolls be revised lower, too?
Slower GDP Growth
The national economy expanded 2.1 percent in the second quarter, down from the 2.4 percent initial estimate, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) reported on Aug. 30. Polled economists did not anticipate revisions.
Personal consumption’s contribution to the final GDP print inched slightly higher from 1.12 percent to 1.14 percent.
Fixed investment was adjusted lower from 0.83 percent to 0.66 percent.
Net exports were changed from negative 1.28 percent to negative 1.26 percent, and imports were lowered from 1.16 percent to 1.04 percent.
Government consumption rose from 0.45 percent to 0.58 percent, meaning that if this metric were unchanged, the second-quarter GDP growth rate would have been just under 2 percent.
The final second-quarter GDP estimate will be published on Sept. 28.
Gross domestic income (GDI), an alternative tracker of economic growth, rose at an annualized clip of 0.5 percent, suggesting that growth is below the long-term trend.
“Despite the modest downward revisions, the second estimate of Quarter 2 GDP continued to show that economic growth expanded at an above-trend pace last quarter, with all the strength concentrated within domestic demand (i.e., consumption, fixed investment, and government),” TD Economics s
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