As the chart above shows, the private sector has created 2 million more jobs in the current than existed before the Great Recession. It's taken a long time to get there, but there is every reason to think that the gains will continue for the foreseeable future.
Friday, December 5, 2014
Early signs of a stronger economy
The November jobs report was a good deal stronger than expected (+314K vs. +225K private sector payrolls), and it comes on the back of stronger-than expected gains in September and October. Increasingly, it's looking like economic growth is beginning to accelerate from the modest 2.3% annual growth which prevailed for the first five years of the current recovery. As I noted earlier this week, continued strength in manufacturing activity points to real growth of 4% or so in the current quarter, and today's strong jobs report makes that more likely. 4% real growth in the fourth quarter would make annualized growth over the last nine months of this year about 4%.
The green line in the first chart above marks the average monthly gain in private sector jobs over the six months ending November 2014. November was a welcome outlier, but it's still possible that it was just noise that will fade away in coming months. Also, even though it was surprising to see a gain of over 300K jobs, that's not huge in an historical context. As the second chart above shows, private sector jobs have increased at an annualized pace of 2.6% in the past six months. That plus a 1% gain in productivity (productivity rose 1% in the 12 months ended September) gives you 3.6% real GDP growth. We would need a lot more than that to get the economy back on its long-term trend growth path. Still, there does appear to be an improving trend underway and that is very good news.
As the chart above shows, the private sector has created 2 million more jobs in the current than existed before the Great Recession. It's taken a long time to get there, but there is every reason to think that the gains will continue for the foreseeable future.
As the chart above shows, the private sector has created 2 million more jobs in the current than existed before the Great Recession. It's taken a long time to get there, but there is every reason to think that the gains will continue for the foreseeable future.
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2 comments:
so the big O gets on TV today and takes credit when I suspect that a GOP house PREVENTING otherwise deleterious policy may have had more to do with a positive recovery than anything the O admin has done. the american economy is incredibly resilient over the long run and I fervently believe it has to do more with old fashioned puritanical work ethic (completely nonexistent in euro) than anything else.
I hope for a long, long boom...and if moderate inflation is a side effect....who cares?
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