The Oklahoman

College grads stuck with low wages as hiring heats up

- BY STEVE MATTHEWS Bloomberg

Connor Reyer gave up after more than a year of looking for a job in his preferred field of forest resources following graduation from the University of Georgia in Athens, finally opting in February for a hotel front-desk job paying $10 an hour.

The relegation of college graduates to nondegree positions was once seen as a temporary blow for young people unlucky enough to graduate around the time of the deep 200709 recession. Instead, millions of Americans like Reyer continue to face the same struggle.

About 44 percent of recent college grads were employed in jobs not requiring degrees in the final quarter of 2016, not far from the 2013 peak of 46 percent, while the share of that group in low-wage positions has held steady, data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York showed Wednesday.

That’s a sign that the nation’s labor market isn’t at full health, despite an unemployme­nt rate forecast to remain at 4.7 percent in March, close to the lowest in almost a decade. In fact, the elevated level of college grads in noncollege jobs could mean there’s still slack and that the Fed can go slow in raising interest rates, betting that more high-wage jobs will materializ­e. It could also mark a more permanent shift in employment that the Fed can’t fix and be a tough challenge for President Donald Trump and Congress.

Fed Chair Janet Yellen and colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee have mostly regarded the poor outcomes of college grads as a structural challenge outside of their control. The idea is that fiscal policies are better equipped to ensure students’ learning prepares them for the demands of employers, as opposed to the phenomenon being a cyclical issue where more monetary easing could bolster outcomes.

“There is something going on suggesting that conditions are a bit worse than during the early 1990s,” said Jaison Abel, a New York Fed economist who has led the study of the issue. While cyclical and structural changes have contribute­d to the rise, “a combinatio­n of both” causes is likely responsibl­e.

In addition to an unemployme­nt rate that’s unchanged from February, Labor Department figures due Friday will show that about 180,000 jobs were added last month, down from 235,000 in February, according to the median estimates of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Gains in average hourly wages may have slightly decelerate­d to a 2.7 percent annual pace.

While Yellen cited a barrage of positive data in March as the central bank raised interest rates for the second time in four months, the chronic underemplo­yment of college graduates points to a need to continue to stimulate growth, according to some analysts.

“This is evidence in support of the view that we are still facing an aggregate demand deficiency — that there’s still a lot of slack in the labor market,” said Jesse Rothstein, a former Labor Department chief economist now at the University of California at Berkeley. “What can be done about it? The Fed can stop acting like we are at full employment and can continue with loose monetary policy.”

Taking up slack

Other indicators suggest there’s still some labormarke­t slack. Labor-force participat­ion for primeage workers — those ages 25 to 54 — was 81.7 percent in February, down from 83.4 percent in January 2007. Wage growth has been lukewarm too: Average hourly earnings rose 2.8 percent in February, compared with 3.6 percent in June 2007, before the recession.

Yellen has cited Yale University research as highlighti­ng the importance of a strong economy at graduation. Those entering the job market in 2010 and 2011 took a 19 percent pay cut from what they could have expected without a recession, according to economists Joseph Altonji, Lisa Kahn and Jamin Speer.

Yet the economic recovery, with job openings doubling since 2010, has hardly erased the problem.

Having such large numbers of underemplo­yed college graduates “is a waste of resources,” said St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, who has argued the Fed doesn’t need to raise rates further over the next few years. “If you put all of those people in the exact right jobs, you would get higher productivi­ty,” he said in a recent interview.

The percentage of underemplo­yed college graduates in “good” or high-paying jobs has dropped steadily since 2014, while the share in low-wage roles has been stagnant at around 8 percent. The Fed research shows various reasons for the phenomenon: Graduates might be in fields with scarce jobs, such as liberal arts, or they might be unable to relocate, or they could have family obligation­s. Some jobs with decent pay — such as police officers and salespeopl­e — don’t typically require degrees.

“The reversal in demand for cognitive skills” following the informatio­n-technology boom of the 1990s is one likely explanatio­n for the high underemplo­yment among the collegeedu­cated, Abel said.

More highly skilled workers in various fields are needed when productivi­ty is booming. Productivi­ty gains have averaged 1 percent a year since the recession, compared with 2.2 percent in the 1990s.

“Since then, technologi­cal change has been more stagnant,” said Paul Beaudry, an economist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. While monetary policy can play a role in stimulatin­g growth, “the solutions require more involvemen­t by the fiscal authoritie­s, and such involvemen­ts are not easy to design,” he said.

Reyer, 22, says he thought his qualificat­ions and degree would be enough. At school, he was active in student groups including being president of the Fisheries Society. He has also volunteere­d at a children’s shelter.

Yet the December 2015 graduate realized he wasn’t going to get placed when he lost a $10.50-an-hour technician job to someone who had earned a master’s degree, something he was unwilling to pursue.

 ?? [BLOOMBERG PHOTO BY LUKE SHARRETT] ?? Pedestrian­s pass in front of a sign outside a Job News USA career fair in Overland Park, Kansas, on March 8.
[BLOOMBERG PHOTO BY LUKE SHARRETT] Pedestrian­s pass in front of a sign outside a Job News USA career fair in Overland Park, Kansas, on March 8.

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