"Jobless and Wageless" Recovery in Pictures; Trends in Jobs and Wage Growth
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Please consider a collections of charts from The “Jobless and Wageless” Recovery from the Great Recession of 2007-2009. Annotations in red (where present)are by me.
GDP 2007 Q4 - 2011 Q1
GDP made a new high but look at the amount of US fiscal stimulus from Congress, monetary stimulus from the Fed, and global stimulus especially China, that it took to achieve that.
Nonfarm Jobs
Total Civilian Employment
By the "end" of the recession the US economy shed 7 million nonfarm jobs and 6 million civilian jobs. Since the official end of the recession, there has been a small net loss of both nonfarm jobs and civilian jobs.
Mean Weekly Private Sector Hours
Mean weekly hours have risen by .5 hours since the recession ended but are still .2 hours below the start of the recession.
Change in Civilian Jobs vs. Prior Recessions 7 Quarters Later
Private Sector Real Hourly Earnings in Constant 201o Dollars
Thanks to the Fed specifically and central bankers in general, real wages are below where they were when the recession ended.
Real Median Weekly Earnings Full-Time Wage and Salary Employees in Constant 2010 Dollars
Trends in Annualized Wage and Salary Accruals CPI-U Adjusted 2010 Dollars
Annualized Value of Corporate Profits in Constant 2010 Dollars
Snip from the report ....
"To date, through the first quarter of 2011, the nation’s recovery from the 2007-2009 recession is both a jobless and a wageless recovery. Aggregate employment still has not increased above the trough quarter of 2009, and real hourly and weekly wages have been flat to modestly negative. The only major beneficiaries of the recovery have been corporate profits and the stock market and its shareholders. Most holders of savings and money market accounts also are net losers due to declining real interest rates which have been in negative territory for many interest bearing and money market accounts."
There are more charts, tables and commentary in the 23 page PDF report.
Given the global economy is clearly weakening (disregarding inventory building and the latest US manufacturing ISM numbers), there is every reason to believe the jobless, wageless, "state of affairs" will last.
Notice I called it "state of affairs". The recovery, if that is what one wants to call what we had, is on its last legs.
For a look at the latest manufacturing ISM numbers and trends in other countries, please see Manufacturing ISM Weaker Than it Looks; Digging Into the Numbers; Inventory Restocking Accounts for Much of the Rise
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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