It's fashionable to argue that there have been more part-time jobs created this year than full-time jobs, and that this is therefore a miserable recovery. But a word of caution is in order: the jobs statistics—like all statistics, especially those that are subject to seasonal variations and revisions, and are sourced using different methodologies such as the jobs statistics are—can be manipulated to prove a point, so you have to take claims like this with a grain of salt. The truth is more likely not as bad as it is made out to be. Here's my attempt to be somewhat impartial.
First, let me briefly note that while all jobs statistics come from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the data are collected in two very different ways. The Establishment Survey relies on sending out a form to known businesses, and it attempts to adjust for new startups that are not known at the time of the survey. The Household Survey relies on a telephone survey of thousands of households for its data. Both have their strengths and weaknesses. Since the Establishment Survey only attempts to uncover the number of jobs, it tells us nothing about who is not working. The Household Survey, in contrast, asks a random sampling of the population if they are working or not, how many hours they are working, and if they are not working whether they are looking for work or not. That's why the unemployment rate comes from the Household Survey, but the most commonly-referenced estimate of total jobs created comes from the Establishment Survey.
As the above chart shows, the Establishment Survey is much less volatile than the Household Survey, although the two tend to tell the same story over time. For example, so far this year the household survey shows the economy has created 975K jobs, but the establishment survey has uncovered 1,347K new jobs. That's quite a big difference—38% more jobs according to the establishment survey. But from the low point in employment (i.e., the end of 2009), the establishment survey shows 6.67 million new jobs and the household survey shows 6.24 million. That's not a very big difference at all (only 7%), especially considering that two-thirds of the time the number of jobs added or subtracted each month according to the household survey can be as much as 300K. The household survey might very well "catch up" to the establishment survey in the next few months.
And if we look just at jobs created by the private sector, the two surveys are very close over longer periods. As the chart above shows, according to the household survey, there have been 7.27 million new private sector jobs created since the end of 2009, while the establishment survey finds 7.29 million. Note also how much more stable the establishment survey is than the household survey.
So let's assume that the household survey gives us a decent idea of how many full- and part-time jobs there are (that's not hard because it's our only source for this statistic), while the establishment survey does a good job at finding total private sector jobs. The public sector is not apt to rely as heavily on part-time employment as is the private sector, so this is arguably a valid comparison.
The above chart compares the level of part-time employment according to the household survey to the ratio of this same measure to the level of total private sector employment according to the establishment survey.
Several things to note:
1) Since the end of the last recession, the level of part-time employment has risen by about 0.7 million. So far this year, it has increased by 0.73 million. In other words, substantially all of the post-recession rise in part-time employment has occurred this year.
2) So far this year, the household survey says that full-time employment has only increased by about 0.22 million, so from this it follows that new part-time jobs have far outnumbered full-time jobs. But is that a fair characterization of the more important long-term trends? I think not. Consider that the same survey finds that total private sector employment has increased by 1.6 million so far this year. There's a lot of slippage in these numbers, and a lot of variation from month to month.
3) Relative to total private sector employment, the level of part-time employment has been declining (albeit irregularly) since the end of the last recession. The rise this year could be due to statistical noise, or it could be due to employers at firms with over 50 full-time employees reacting to the higher costs that will be imposed on them by Obamacare, and converting full-time employment into part-time employment to avoid the employer mandate. (I'm partial to the latter interpretation.) In any event, the recent rise in part-time employment this year is not likely symptomatic of any major, systematic, or sinister changes in the makeup of the U.S. labor force. We seen levels of part-time employment such as we have now several times in the past, and they usually follow recessions. This is nothing new or extraordinary.
Taking a dispassionate view from a longer-term perspective, the hue and cry over the recent rise in part-time employment seems way overdone. The more important truth is that the economy is generating almost 200K new private sector jobs per month, and most of the new jobs are likely full-time jobs. That's not a very stellar performance by historical standards—if this were a typical recovery we would have seem many millions more jobs created—but it's nothing to disparage.
UPDATE: Mark Perry provides some useful statistics which further explain this. And as he notes here, most of the increase in part-time employment came in just one month: March.
The second chart down, shows some of the highest levels of part-time workers in US history.
ReplyDeleteIs Mr Wallace or Mr Grannis wong?
I would think that in light of CommieCare, the private sector has had to take a defense position when hiring..
Employers have been warming everyone of their future hiring practices. Call White Castle, whom offered health care benefits.
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2013/08/an-analysis-of-july-employment-numbers.html
The second chart down, shows some of the highest levels of part-time workers in US history.
ReplyDeleteIs Mr Wallace or Mr Grannis wong?
I would think that in light of CommieCare, the private sector has had to take a defense position when hiring..
Employers have been warming everyone of their future hiring practices. Call White Castle, whom offered health care benefits.
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2013/08/an-analysis-of-july-employment-numbers.html
Bonddad pointed out that the part-time jobs in the totals for the household survey this year appear to be some artifact of the seasonal adjustment process:
ReplyDelete"Through May, there were still many more full time (370,000) than part time (197,000) jobs created in 2013. Then, in June, the bottom dropped out, as 240,000 full time jobs were lost, while 360,000 part time jobs were created. It is entirely because of that one month that full time vs. part time jobs comparison looks so poor measured from the beginning of this year."
Beyond that, even though the household numbers are seasonally adjusted, it looks like there is some unaccounted seasonality still left in the numbers. As you can see in the chart below, there has been a pattern ever since the recession whereby full time jobs ramp up through May, and then decline (or at least decelerate) through August, before rising again. In fact, through August of 2011, full time jobs were actually negative as measured from the first of the year (all numbers in 1,000's):
Seasonal adjust problems could indeed be the cause. Thanks for the link.
ReplyDeleteSuperb wrap-up of a very challenging topic. It is nice to see analysis, and not punditry, on economics.
ReplyDeleteThat said, I do worry about Obamacare, and its impact on hiring.
Obamacare is just too complicated and penalizes productive people. (Lest people think I am just a right-winger, there are plenty of tax, VA, defense and NSA programs I think are too complicated and expensive as well).
Obamacare comes at a time when employers were anyway exploring the advantages of part-time workers and outsourcing.
I might support a national single-payor health care system. But it would have to limit outlays to some percentage of GDP, such as 14 percent.
I have made a career by maintaining a portfolio of "part-time" clients and businesses -- one of the secrets of my success in life -- wouldn't have it ant other way...
ReplyDeletemere logic would argue that there will be more part time jobs created than full time given "commiecare"s moronic mandate.
ReplyDeleteFed.gov furloughs are also a recent factor in the increase in the level of part-time employment for economic reasons.
ReplyDeleteBonddad is misinterpreting the data. The Household Survey Table 1 measures the change in the employment level and Table 8 measures the composition of the level. Don't conflate both tables.
@marmico,
ReplyDeleteIt looks to me like he's using neither Table 1 nor Table 8, but instead is taking all his data from Table A-9.
Could be. It makes no difference. Fed.gov furloughed worker compositionally increases part-time +1, reduces full time -1 but the change in level is 0.
ReplyDeleteThis article states, that 75%, yes that is 3 out of 4 hired are part-timers.
ReplyDeleteThank you Mr BOCO and Ted Kennedy...
BTW, have you noticed that CONgress, their staff and the WH are all exempt from CommieCare!
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100977130
Having a part time job is better than being unemployed where your bills rely too much on an income protection cover just to get by.
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