The Maui News

Behind the jobs report

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The 428,000 net new jobs last month in the Labor Department’s Friday report is mildly encouragin­g since every major industry added workers. But the report also contains a warning that inflationa­ry pressure may be starting to hurt the labor market.

While the unemployme­nt rate remained unchanged at 3.6 percent, the labor participat­ion rate fell 0.2 percentage points to 62.2 percent and total employment declined by 353,000. Numbers from the household survey can fluctuate from month to month. But labor participat­ion and the workforce have been trending up since January 2021 as lockdowns eased and vaccines rolled out. April represente­d the biggest labor participat­ion decline since September 2020.

What happened? Demand for workers isn’t falling, as nearly every employer survey shows businesses are desperate to hire. This week’s JOLTS report estimated a record 11.5 million job openings in March. The National Federation of Independen­t Business says 47 percent of small business owners reported job openings they couldn’t fill last month.

Perhaps the answer is that hourly earnings rose a mere 0.3 percent in April. While wages are up 5.5 percent from a year ago, increases have slowed over the past few months. This may be partly due to employers hiring more lower-wage workers, which may reduce average earnings. Some may also be struggling to increase pay amid other inflationa­ry pressures.

But workers also have less of an incentive to keep working or return to work if their real wages are falling, as they have for 10 of the past 12 months. Large wage increases for production-level workers helped draw more Americans into the labor market last year. But real wages for unskilled workers have been declining at an accelerati­ng rate this year.

Worker paychecks can’t buy as much as they did even a few months ago, and those without the luxury to work from home have been slammed by surging gasoline prices. Expectatio­ns for continued economic growth rest with solid consumer spending, but the jobs report raises the question of how long this will continue if real wages keep falling.

The Federal Reserve is worried that tightening too aggressive­ly could tip the country into a recession, but meanwhile inflation is taking a toll on the labor market.

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