The September unemployment report is really a disaster. Yet another 579,000 people dropped out of the labor force. The labor participation rate dropped to record lows not seen since October 1977. That's 38 years ago. Even more disturbing is how the unemployment rate is really undermined as a reading on the state of labor. The official unemployment rate did not change at all and remained at 5.1%.
The August unemployment report shows steady as she goes sorts of statistics. Yet, the report is really a mixed bag. The unemployment rate dropped two tenths of a percentage point to be 5.1%. The labor participation rate remained the same, 62.6%, and hasn't changed for three months. Once again over a quarter of a million people dropped out of the labor force.
The July employment report shows almost the same results as last month. The unemployment rate remained the same, 5.3%. The labor participation rate also did not change from the 62.6% low. More people dropped out of the labor force than became employed. While 144,000 dropped out of the labor force, only 101 thousand more became employed.
The June employment report brings some OMG, jaw dropping, are you kidding me numbers. Over 640,000 dropped out of the labor force. As a result, the unemployment rate declined two tenths of a percentage point to 5.3%. The labor participation rate dropped by -0.3 percentage points to 62.6%. This new low of a labor participation rate has not seen since October 1977 when women and minorities were still were not in the workforce extensively.
The April unemployment rate remained the same, yet unlike the past few months, the lack of change was not due to people dropping out of the workforce. Instead the participation rate ticked up a smidgen and more people were considered employed. The official unemployment rate is 5.4%, a tenth of a percentage point lower than last month.
The March unemployment rate remained the same, yet once again the BLS survey showed another huge increase in those not considered part of the labor force anymore and as a result the figure hit a record 93.175 million high. The official unemployment rate is 5.5%. The labor participation rate is also 62.7% and remains at 37 year record lows. From a year ago, the number of people considered not in the labor force has increased by over two million.
The February unemployment rate dropped yet again on a huge decline of those not considered part of the labor force anymore. The official unemployment rate is now 5.5%, a -0.2 drop from last month. The labor participation rate is at 37 year record lows. From a year ago, the number of people considered not in the labor force has increased by 1.5 million.
The BLS employment report is another good showing for payroll jobs as growth was 257,000. January is the month of revisions and November 2014 is now a 423,000 jobs added blowout with December 2014 not far behind with 329,000 jobs added. We're on year eight after the start of the great recession and 2014 is finally when America started seeing some jobs growth.
The December unemployment rate dropped on almost half a million more people considered not part of the labor force. The official unemployment rate is now 5.6%, a -0.2 drop from last month. The labor participation rate went back to 38 year record lows and is 62.7%. From a year ago, the number of people considered not in the labor force has increased by 1.2 million those considered employed grew by 2.7 million.
The BLS Npvember current population survey unemployment report shows almost a static situation from last month, unlike the reported payroll gains portion of the jobs report. The unemployment rate did not change and is still 5.8%. The labor participation rate also did not change from the very low, 62.8%. Even the unemployed's increase of 115,000 is statistically insignificant.
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