Austin American-Statesman

Job market murky ahead of key report

Labor Department data may confirm weather deflated the job market.

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The U.S. economy has been skating on an icy patch in advance of the February jobs report, which is scheduled to be released Friday.

WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy has been skating on an icy patch in advance of the February jobs report, which is scheduled to be released Friday.

Hiring skidded in December and January to roughly half its average monthly pace of last year. Auto buying, existing-home sales and factory orders have slid as key economic sectors surrendere­d to a harsh winter. And the economy entered 2014 with less momentum than initially thought.

All of which magnifies the importance of Friday’s jobs report. The Labor Department data could help confirm the belief that nasty weather froze much of the job market last month — and that spring should bring a bounce back. The February jobs report also could expose some of the frailties of a still-sluggish economic recovery that’s almost a half-decade old.

Here are five vital signs that shed some light on the state of the job market to date:

Layoffs

Evidence emerged Thursday that the economy should thaw once the weather does: 323,000 people applied for unemployme­nt benefits last week, the Labor Department said. That might sound like a lot. But it’s no more than the number who typically sought benefits before the recession began at the end of 2007. Applicatio­ns for benefits essentiall­y reflect layoffs. And their low current levels suggest that companies foresee stronger consumer demand ahead, because layoffs would rise if employers expected business to weaken.

Hiring

It’s heartening when few people are being laid off. But the other side of the equation is hiring. And employers haven’t been filling many jobs. The nation’s month-

ly job growth averaged a seasonally adjusted 94,000 in December and January. That was far below last year’s average monthly gain of 194,000. A third straight tepid month would be deflating. For February, economists predict that 145,000 jobs were added, according to a survey by FactSet.

Still, the economy has endured cold streaks before during the recovery. It averaged fewer than 71,000 added jobs a month between December 2010 and January 2011. It averaged 99,000 for two months in mid-2012. The question is whether job growth for the rest of 2014 can elevate the pace of hiring to at least last year’s average.

Jobless rate

At 6.6 percent, the unemployme­nt rate is the lowest it’s been in more than five years. That should be cause for celebratio­n. The Federal Reserve had once said the economy might be weaned off its stimulus of near-zero short-term interest rates once unemployme­nt fell to 6.5 percent. At that point, the gravitatio­nal pull of the recovery was supposed to be enough to propel growth. Not anymore.

What happened? The unemployme­nt rate has become somewhat misleading. That’s because lots of Americans have stopped looking for work in the past few years. Once people without a job stop looking for one, they’re no longer counted as unemployed. When fewer people are counted as unemployed, the rate will fall.

Some of these people have retired. Some have abandoned a futile hunt for work. Or have returned to school. The share of people either working or looking for work dipped to 63 percent in January from 66 percent at the end of 2007, when the recession began.

Compared with before the recession, 1.35 million more people fall into a category of Americans who say they want a job but aren’t actively seeking one. If you count them, the unemployme­nt rate in January would have been 7.4 percent.

Long-term jobless

One of the recovery’s frustratin­g failures has been the inability of people who have been out of work for at least six months to find a job. These long-term unemployed number around 3.6 million. Their number has declined by more than 1 million over the past year, but they still account for a high 36 percent of all unemployed Americans.

The plight of many of these people has worsened. That’s because unemployme­nt benefits were cut off late last year for 1.4 million who have been out of work for six months or more. That’s when an emergency federal program for the long-term unemployed expired.

Searching for a job was one of the conditions for receiving benefits. Many economists think some portion of these people likely stopped looking for a job last month.

Most economists say the loss of those benefits could slow economic growth if many people who lost benefits haven’t found a job. Without unemployme­nt checks, those 1.4 million people have less money to spend on groceries, housing and transporta­tion. And 70 percent of all economic activity flows from consumer spending.

Employer demand

The monthly jobs report is widely followed. But many economists pay close attention to a more obscure indicator: job openings online. The private Conference Board said this week that advertised openings in February rose 268,100 to 5.19 million. This increase matters because it points to pent-up demand for workers, even if recent government data suggests otherwise.

“That speaks volumes that it’s not all dire straits out there,” said Jennifer Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets. “That alone gives me hope that we will see stronger numbers in the next few months, if not in February itself.”

 ?? SAM HODGSON / BLOOMBERG ?? Home Depot Inc. employees speak late last month with a job seeker at a military veteran job fair in San Diego. Across the U.S., more than 5 million job openings were advertised in February.
SAM HODGSON / BLOOMBERG Home Depot Inc. employees speak late last month with a job seeker at a military veteran job fair in San Diego. Across the U.S., more than 5 million job openings were advertised in February.

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