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A Case Study The September Unemployment Rate Date of Announcement October 3, 2003 Date of the next Announcement November 7, 2003 Announcement The unemployment rate for the month of September was 6.1 percent equal to the 6.1 percent unemployment in August. Total employment rose by 57,000 in September. The rise in employment has received the most attention in the news as it is the first in nine months. Some observers are saying that perhaps this indicates the economy is truly recovering from the 2001 recession. We should be cautious about placing too much emphasis on any one month’s results. It may not represent a change in the trend of falling employment and generally higher unemployment. The original press release is available at: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nro.htm. Teachers' Notes Material in italics in this case does not appear in the student version. Each case describes the most current data and trends and expands expectations of student understanding. In this case, the relation among employment, wages, and inflation is introduced, along with definitions of frictional, structural, and cyclical unemployment. Goals of the Unemployment Case Study The purpose of this case study is to report the unemployment and employment data, to provide interpretations of the significance of the changes in conditions, and to discuss a number of related economic concepts. The case study includes additional data on the distribution of unemployment, definitions of unemployment and the costs of unemployment. The causes of unemployment are presented along with discussion of possible alternative policies. The case ends with exercises for students and activities that teachers can use in classrooms. 1 The case offers an opportunity to enhance our understanding of the relevance of the announcements and the causes and consequences of one of the more important challenges economic policymakers face. Definition of the Unemployment Rate The unemployment rate is the percentage of the U.S. labor force that is unemployed. It is calculated by dividing the number of unemployed individuals by the sum of the number of people unemployed and the number of people employed. The number of people unemployed and the number of people employed is the number of individuals in the labor force. An individual is counted as unemployed if the individual is over the age of 16 and is actively looking for a job, but cannot find one. Students, those individuals who choose to not work, and retirees are therefore not counted in the unemployment rate. Table 1 Relevance of Unemployment Announcements The monthly unemployment announcements receive headline treatment almost every month. Changes are significant indicators of national economic conditions and have relevance to every local community as unemployment has significant costs to the individuals who are unemployed and to the entire community and the U.S. economy. Those costs are explored in this case study. Changes in levels of employment are also included in the announcements and often receive less attention. However, the employment data are equally, perhaps even more, important indicators of the direction of the U.S. economy. Recent announcements have received particular attention as employment continues to fall and unemployment has increased. Discussion in the press will focus on whether the U.S. economy continues in a very slow growth pattern and whether or not something should be done by the federal government or Federal Reserve. Data Trends The trend over the 1990s, since the recession in 1990-1991, has been a decrease in unemployment and an increase in employment. In 1999 and 2000, annual growth in employment was 2.8 million people, with approximately 155,000 more people employed each month. That trend added employment of over 15 million people during the last decade. Figure 1 2 At its low in December 2000, unemployment equaled 3.9 percent. But since March 2001, the trend has generally been one of increasing unemployment and decreasing employment. However, the unemployment rate in September (6.1 percent) is the same as the August. This is a decrease from the nine-year high reached in June of 6.4 percent. Total nonfarm payroll employment (seasonally adjusted) rose by 57,000 in September to a little under 130 million persons employed. Education and health services, other services, and construction employment increased slightly. Over the past 2 years, government employment has trended upward, but was little changed this month. Recently, budget problems have lowered the rate of job growth in state and local governments. However, local government employment increased slightly during September. The largest job decline in September in employment occurred in manufacturing. This decline has continued for the last three years. The decline was smaller than it has been over the last year. The portion of unemployed who have been unemployed for more that one-half of a year has steadily increased since the end of 2001 and now represents more than 23 percent of the unemployed. Figure 2 Importance of the Changes In newspapers and magazines and on television news, much has been written and said about economic problems in the U.S. economy and rising unemployment. The references have been to the effects of the 2001 recession. Throughout 2003, talk has turned to larger increases in real GDP and productivity, accompanied by continuing falls in employment. That is, the growth in the economy has not been fast enough to expand the number of jobs. If productivity rises more rapidly than output, employment will fall. This announcement may be a reversal of those recent trends. Employment reached a peak in March 2001. We have almost lost 2.8 million jobs since then. Distribution of Unemployment Unemployment varies significantly among groups of individuals and parts of the country. Table two shows the unemployment rates for a number of groups of 3 Table 2 individuals, with unemployment rates ranging from 5.3 for adult women to 17.5 percent for teenagers. In Table 2, compare the unemployment rate for teenagers to the unemployment rate for adults. Why are these rates different? There are a number of explanations for the unemployment rate differentials between teenagers and adults. Many jobs require a degree of education, skill, and experience that teenagers lack. Education and experience measure the amount of what economists call human capital. Most adults possess more human capital than teenagers because they have attended college and professional schools, have been trained in a particular field, and have job experience. The degree of specialization and increased knowledge in a field, not to mention an understanding of the demands of many workplaces, will tend to make an adult worker more productive than a teenager. When an employer is hiring a worker, the employer most often attempts to hire the most productive candidate, which is often the more educated and more skilled worker. Therefore, adults are preferentially hired over teenagers, an event that leads to adults having a lower unemployment rate than teenagers. The Costs of Unemployment There are significant personal costs to unemployment. Unemployed workers often do not have the income to support themselves or their families. The stress of being unemployed is reflected through increases in alcohol and drug abuse, marital problems, and criminal activity among those who are unemployed. State and federal governments reduce the personal financial cost of being unemployed through the unemployment compensation provided to many unemployed workers. Government spending is funded, in the largest part, from tax revenues. Therefore, unemployment compensation spreads out the cost of being unemployed among taxpayers, instead of having the entire burden fall on the unemployed worker. Increases in unemployment also mean that the economy is wasting an important scarce resource – labor. Real GDP is less than it otherwise could be and that additional output is lost forever. If more individuals had been employed, production of goods and services would have been higher. Employment A second important part of each month’s unemployment announcement is the report of the number of individuals employed. Unemployment and unemployment rates receive much of the press attention and rightfully so. But employment and a loss or gain in jobs are also essential indicators of progress in 4 the economy. Recent decreases in employment are of particular concern right now. The unemployment and employment even show different trends in some cases. For example, in some months, including months this past summer, a falling unemployment rate was accompanied by a fall in employment. How can the number of individuals employed fall and the unemployment rate fall at the same time? This must mean that the number of individuals unemployed fell also. Most likely, what has happened is that some unemployed individuals became discouraged and are no longer looking for work. Many of those individuals may have simply given up on finding a job in the near future. If people lose their jobs and leave the labor force in sufficient numbers, they also are not counted as unemployed. If both events happen, the unemployment rate can fall at the same time the number of individuals with jobs actually decreases. In many of recent months the labor force has actually declined as some of the newly unemployed dropped out of the labor force and many who would normally enter the labor force have not. This month employment rose, while the unemployment rate remained constant. The actual number of people unemployed also rose as more individuals entered the labor force. The unemployment data and the employment data are actually derived from two different surveys. It is possible for some inconsistencies to arise from time to time. In fact, for some time the two sources have shown different trends. Figure 3 Figure 3 shows that growth in employment slowed in 2000 and stopped in March of 2001. Employment actually decreased in all but one of the months of 2001, all but four in 2002, and all but January and September in 2003. As growth in spending has slowed and actually decreased in the first three quarters of 2001, businesses reduced their labor forces. (See the most recent GDP case study.) A sustained fall in employment is one of the measures economists use when determining the existence of a recession and indeed reached a peak just before the beginning of the current recession. Part of the recent trend in falling employment at the same time real GDP is rising is due to the difference between productivity changes and the rise in spending. If productivity is rising more rapidly than spending and production in the economy, fewer workers are needed to produce the greater output. Employment, Wages, and Inflation In September 2003, average hourly earnings for private sector increased 1 cent to $15.45. Average weekly earnings decreased by one-tenth of one percent in September to $520.67 in spite of the fact that average weekly hours remained unchanged. 5 To a worker, wages represent income and a quantity of goods and services that can be purchased as a result of an hour’s labor. To employers, wages represent the cost of an input. An employer usually has additional costs of labor such as supplements, benefits and insurance plans. If companies were expanding the number of workers, the pool of available workers becomes smaller and unemployment decreases. Competition among companies forces wages up as companies offer higher wages in order to attract workers to their firm. These increased wages are an increased cost of production. If these costs are passed on to the consumer in the form of higher retail prices, they represent inflationary pressures in the economy. Types of Unemployment There are three types of unemployment, each of which describes the particular circumstances of the individual and their employment situation. Frictional unemployment is temporary unemployment arising from the normal job search process. Frictional unemployment helps the economy function more efficiently as it simply refers to those people who are seeking better or more convenient jobs and will always exist in any economy. Structural unemployment is the result of changes in the economy caused by technological progress and shifts in the demand for goods and services. Structural changes eliminate some jobs in certain sectors of the economy and create new jobs in faster growing areas. Persons who are structurally unemployed do not have marketable job skills and may face prolonged periods of unemployment, as they must often be retrained or relocate in order to find employment. Cyclical unemployment is unemployment caused by a drop in economic activity. This type of unemployment can hit many different industries and is caused by a general downturn in the business cycle. Case Study Discussion Questions 1. What are the key parts of the unemployment announcement? 2. What are the relevant economic concepts? 3. What does this mean for workers? Sample Answers to Case Study Questions 1. The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 6.1%. Employment increased for the first time in nine months. 2. The rate of unemployment and the change in labor force. 3. Hourly earnings decreased slightly. Given that the labor force has been decreasing, some potential workers may be more pessimistic about the possibility of finding a job. 6 The latest announcement is good news as more workers have been hired and may create a more optimistic environment. [Insert the following interactive exercises here] 1. How could employment and unemployment fall at the same time? 2. What happens to the unemployment rate if employment increases from 140 million persons to 145 million people and unemployment increases from 5 to 10 million? 3. What is the approximate current rate of unemployment? 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 4. If a student with a summer job quits and returns to school, what will happen to actual employment? To actual unemployment? To the unemployment rate? Answers to interactive questions. 1. If those who are no longer employed actually are not looking for work and therefore are not counted as unemployed. 2. It increases. From 3.6 % (5/140) to6.9 % (10/145). 3. 6 percent. 4. Employment decreases as there is one fewer persons working. Unemployment does not change, as the student is no longer counted in the work force or as unemployed. The unemployment rate increases as the number of unemployed as stayed the same and the labor force has decreased. Classroom Discussion Activity 7 Go to the BLS website and check the Local Area Unemployment Statistics for your city and state (www.bls.gov/news.release/metro.t01.htm). 1. Is unemployment in your area higher, lower, or roughly the same as the national average? 2. What factors contribute to your area’s unemployment rate? Which industries have expanded? Which industries have contracted? 3. Will the recent changes affect you? Relevant National Economic Standards The relevant national economic standards are numbers 18, 19, and 20. 18. A nation's overall levels of income, employment, and prices are determined by the interaction of spending and production decisions made by all households, firms, government agencies, and others in the economy. Students will be able to use this knowledge to interpret media reports about current economic conditions and explain how these conditions can influence decisions made by consumers, producers, and government policy makers. 19. Unemployment imposes costs on individuals and nations. Unexpected inflation imposes costs on many people and benefits some others because it arbitrarily redistributes purchasing power. Inflation can reduce the rate of growth of national living standards because individuals and organizations use resources to protect themselves against the uncertainty of future prices. Students will be able to use this knowledge to make informed decisions by anticipating the consequences of inflation and unemployment. 20. Federal government budgetary policy and the Federal Reserve System's monetary policy influence the overall levels of employment, output, and prices. Students will be able to use this knowledge to anticipate the impact of federal government and Federal Reserve System macroeconomic policy decisions on themselves and others. Sources Of Additional Activities Advanced Placement Economics: Macroeconomics. (National Council on Economic Education) 8 Activity 13. Types of unemployment. (Also see activities 21 and 22. Full Employment in a Capitalist Economy.) Advanced Placement Economics: Microeconomics (National Council on Economic Education) Unit Two: The Nature and Function of Markets Economics USA: A Resource Guide for Teachers Lesson 12: Monetary Policy: How Well Does It Work? Lesson 13: Stabilization Policy: Are We Still in Control? Focus on Economics: High School Economics (National Council on Economic Education) Lesson 2. Broad Social Goals of an Economy Lesson 18. Economics Ups and Downs Focus on Economics: Civics and Government (National Council on Economic Education) Lesson 11. What can a Government Do About Unemployment? Handbook of Economic Lessons (California Council on Economic Education) Lesson 5. Unemployment in the United States: How is it Measured? High School Economics Courses: Teaching Strategies Lesson 2: Different Means of Organizing an Economy Lesson 15: Economic Goals All are available in Virtual Economics, An Interactive Center for Economic Education (National Council on Economic Education) or directly through the National Council on Economic Education. Authors: Stephen Buckles Erin Kiehna Vanderbilt University 9