The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Quirk in job numbers points to new strategy

- dhaar@hearstmedi­act.com DAN HAAR

If you’re reading this while on the job, working for yourself or for an employer in another state, you might be part of a trend.

No, it’s not a rise in the number of people consuming news while working. Well, maybe that, too, but this is about the Connecticu­t job market.

A quirk in the numbers has experts perplexed, and it just might help explain why job growth in this state has been somewhere between lame and awful over the last several years. If we understand the quirk, and if it’s real, we might be able to market the state in a way that works better.

Since the recession, Connecticu­t famously has lagged almost all other states in job creation. This has been widely reported of course, and the problem seems to be growing worse, not better, as the economic boom that missed Connecticu­t winds down.

That is based on a monthly survey of thousands of employers, followed by revisions using actual payroll data.

But there’s another monthly survey — of a much smaller sample of households — that shows a consistent­ly different picture. The number of Connecticu­t residents in that survey who say they are working has risen fairly nicely over the last six years, since it bottomed out in 2013.

The difference is a whopping 86,000 people over the last six years, and that’s the mystery. Do they really exist?

Could it be that we’re not counting all the people who are working in Connecticu­t — and the picture isn’t quite as bad as it looks? Who are these missing people who say they have jobs but don’t appear on the statistica­lly accurate jobs count?

Are they working from home, for companies in other states that don’t report Connecticu­t job totals? Are they selfemploy­ed. Or is all of this just statistica­l noise, a sort of cosmic economic joke?

Experts don’t agree. Here are the numbers:

Between 2013 and 2019, the number of added jobs in Connecticu­t’s economy has totaled an anemic 39,500, or 6,600 per year, as measured by the survey of employers and payroll data. That’s about onethird of 1 percent per year; it’s the figure we in the economics game report widely, and it’s considered accurate.

In 2018, the gain was only 2,200. I’m using annual averages including the the first six months of 2019. There are other ways to measure this but they don’t change the picture.

Then we have the household survey, which has shown an increase of 125,500 Connecticu­t residents since 2013 who say they’re working. That comes out to 20,900 a year, a healthy rise of well over 1 percent per year if it’s true.

Both numbers can’t be right unless some weird stuff is happening.

“Statistica­l significan­ce is what it comes down to,” said Donald KlepperSmi­th of DataCore Partners, who has tracked the state’s jobs picture for decades.

That household survey queries a maximum of about 1,500 people a month, sometimes half that. It’s the survey the Department of Labor uses to determine the unemployme­nt rate, which is statistica­lly dicey. “Every state has issues with statistica­l validity with respect to the household survey,” KlepperSmi­th said.

Certainly for any one month, or any one year, we trust the employerba­sed jobs numbers over the household numbers because of “data noise.” But over six years?

“That kind of trend shouldn’t hold up that long as noise,” said Andy Condon, director of research at the state Department of Labor.

Let’s assume it’s a combinatio­n of factors including noise. We know the financial services industry is resurgent in New York, and not so much in Connecticu­t, since the recession. That, Condon and others say, could account for some of the quirk.

David Lewis, CEO of Operations­Inc, a Norwalk-based human resources firm, said an increase of people working in New York probably doesn’t explain the whole 86,000person quirk. “That seems improbable, but I can get you maybe 10,000,” he said, largely by looking at the apartment boom in the South End of Stamford.

Condon added, “There’s been an increase in people going to Massachuse­tts” to work, while still living in Connecticu­t.

That would make sense considerin­g the sharply rising number of jobs, especially in metro Boston, and the nutty housing prices there. If you live in, say, Fairfield and you land a job in Waltham, Mass., and you have kids in the local schools, wouldn’t you at least ask if you could work from home and maybe commute a few days a month to avoid uprooting to a house that costs twice what you can fetch for yours?

Then there’s the rise in selfemploy­ed people, especially in the socalled gig economy. We know they are not captured by the survey of employers. The U.S. Department of Labor conducted a study, Condon said.

“They found not a huge increase of people working as contractor­s... and there’s no reason I can think of in Connecticu­t why that would be entirely different here.”

But it’s possible selfemploy­ed people are part of the picture, as with remote workers, if they don’t want to leave Connecticu­t and find better work that way than in the mainstream corporate and smallbusin­ess economy.

We could have a more accurate picture if the state were able to see detailed IRS data, Condon said, but he added, “The difficulty of obtaining IRS data is significan­t, especially for a small shop like ours.”

So the labor force has been rising while job totals have not, at least not as much. That might be changing, Condon said, pointing to a flattening and decline in 2019 of both the labor force numbers from the household survey and the jobs numbers. “There’s a new dynamic going on,” he said. “We’re running out of people.”

That is, the number of people in Connecticu­t of working age — whether or not they’re working — is declining.

That’s a problem for employers and for the state as a whole. Which brings us to marketing. Right now we’re trying to attract and keep companies as a strategy.

Cassidy Norton, associate publisher and media relations chief for The Warren Group, a Bostonbase­d real estate informatio­n business, has a different idea.

“I think Connecticu­t should rebrand itself as a place where people can work remotely,” Norton said.

Why not? Marketing works best when it follows trends that are already happening.

 ?? Dan Haar / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Rina Patel is manager of the Stanley Black & Decker factory in Danbury. A quirk in the state’s job growth numbers has experts perplexed, and it just might help explain why job growth in this state has been somewhere between lame and awful over the last several years.
Dan Haar / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Rina Patel is manager of the Stanley Black & Decker factory in Danbury. A quirk in the state’s job growth numbers has experts perplexed, and it just might help explain why job growth in this state has been somewhere between lame and awful over the last several years.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States