Fabricated Payroll Report?

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This rumor was vehemently denied by the Secretary of Labor on Bloomberg about 12 today, but if someone asked me who I believed....I'm going with this explanation. I think that report was complete and utter bs today. The Secretary of Labor was on for damage control. Just more manipulation from Washington and a President that said he wouldn't let the day-to-day gyrations of the market influence him. Funny, all I'm seeing is the 3 Stooges (Obama, Geithner, and Bernanke) doing everything they can to instill a false confidence in this market.


May Employment Report Not Believable



Friday, June 5, 2009, 8:51 am, by cmartenson
picture-4.jpg

Well, I thought that I had seen some fantastic data manipulation in the past, but today's release of the May employment report by the BLS was a real keeper. It is one for the books (the forensic accounting books, specifically).
Here's the news:
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Job losses slowed dramatically in May, according to the latest government reading on the battered labor market, even as the unemployment rate rose to a 26-year high.
Employers cut 345,000 jobs from their payrolls in the month, down from the revised 504,000-job decline in April.
What spectacular news! Stock futures vaulted, gold killed, the dollar rebounded - all in all a very favorable set of market outcomes that are certainly welcome in the marbled halls of DC and on Wall Street.
The problem is that this huge surprise to the upside is completely out of line with other sources of data and depends (once again) on an incredibly suspect boost from the Birth-Death Model. Let's start there.
In the chart below, you are looking at the number of jobs that the BLS has "modeled" to have been created. These are either added to or subtracted from the total that is reported and trumpeted across the financial-media spin machine.
I want you to note the blue arrows, which reveal that 43,000 construction jobs were somehow added in the month of May, along with 77,000 "leisure & hospitality" (hotels and parks and such) jobs and even 7,000 financial services jobs (I bet there are more than a few banking industry folks wondering where those might be!).
Birth-Death_220k_May.jpg

All told, this resulted in 220,000 jobs being added to the reported number, which came in at 345,000 where 520,000 were expected. This is an enormous improvement of +175,000 jobs over the expected number; the only problem is that 220,000 of these jobs cannot be counted, touched, or verified, as they were modeled.
Now I don't know about you, but in my neck of the woods, this year is much darker on the job front than last year. Every piece of data I am reading suggests that this is a national phenomenon. How many jobs were "modeled" and added last May? Only 176,000. So we might ask ourselves, again, what sort of a model is it that can find a way to add 25% more jobs this May than last May? What exactly are the inputs that feed this model?
One clue can be divined by looking at this chart of past Birth-Death job additions for the month of May, stretching back to the start of the decade.
CES_Birth_Death_for_May_b.jpg

Looking at the chart above, we might note that the Birth-Death model ramped up its additions from 2000 to 2004 and now seems "pegged" in a very narrow band. Equally odd is the observation that the model's output is impervious to both growth and recessions. Even more oddly, we might note that over the past ten years it is this May that has the highest modeled "addition" of them all. How does this jibe with your sense of things? Do you feel dizzy when you try and compare your experience with this data? That dizziness is due to cognitive dissonance.
Another private source for employment data comes from ADP, which is a payroll processing company that services a very large number of businesses. I haven't been the biggest fan of the ADP data, especially since they started revising their methods to more closely track the BLS releases.
As Barry Rithotz so accurately put it a while ago:
ADP has their own proprietary data sources; they track employees (new and existing), they can track payroll dollars (total gains and losses, and per employee changes), off of the actual payroll checks going to employees. Why try to imitate the BLS output each month? ADP can create a very specific set of reports that ARE PURELY DRIVEN BY THEIR OWN PAYROLL RECEIPTS, that stands on its own.
Why even bother messing around with trying to imitate or forecast BLS data?
The BLS Non-Farm Payroll numbers are somewhat flawed, subject to massive revisions, and fatally flawed due to how the Birth Death adjustment has been applied.
If ADP wants to contribute something valuable, they should stop trying to forecast BLS, and instead generate their own, proprietary, data driven monthly NFP numbers.
With that said, here was the ADP estimate for May:
The ADP National Employment Report
May, 2009
Nonfarm private employment decreased 532,000 from April to May 2009 on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to the ADP National Employment Report®. The estimated change of employment from March to April was revised by 54,000, from a decline of 491,000 to a decline of 545,000.
(Source)
The interesting part is that the ADP number does not include government workers, so I would have expected the BLS release (which does) to have tracked lower, not higher, than the ADP data. I say this because every state I have looked at has either cut or frozen government jobs. Yet the BLS report estimated that only 7,000 government jobs were lost across the entire country, which is mysterious, since quite a few of the temporary census jobs were terminated in May.
And not just a few either:
TOWNSHEND, Vt. (AP) -- For weeks, Greg Noel roamed the spine of the Green Mountains with a handheld GPS unit, walking dirt roads and chatting with people as he helped create a map of every housing unit in the United States.
Work was good: The sun was out, the snow was gone and the blackflies hadn't begun to hatch. But now that work is over and Noel, 60, and more than 60,000 other Americans hired in April to help with the 2010 census are out of work once more.
(Source)
Given that 60,000 temporary census jobs went away, I am at a loss to figure out how all the other government hiring and firing collectively added up to a 53,000 job gain to secure the final -7,000 reading.
As before, my assumption is that these numbers are quite fuzzy, not worth the paper they are printed on, and heavily falsified to achieve narrow political and market influencing aims.
While I can certainly understand, and even find some compassion for, the desire to manipulate the data to inject some confidence and optimism into the populace and markets, I must regretfully conclude that such efforts are more damaging than helpful.
We did ourselves no favors by fibbing to ourselves during the blowing of the credit bubble, and we do ourselves no favors by repeating that behavior now. We need good and believable data. I judge that our markets would respond better in the long run to believable data, and that we actually owe it to ourselves to provide the most honest and accurate assessments of reality that we can.
 

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I tend to believe the reports are reasonably accurate, but they're not an exact science either.

Having said that, it's plausible that there was job growth in the three segments emphasized in the OP.

Construction & leisure industries have a great many "seasonal" fluctuations, and tend to grow in the spring anyways. There is a whole segment of workers that collect unemployment during the winter months each ands every year, regardless of economic conditions.

Furthermore, the construction, leisure & finance industries were all hit hard when spending stopped cold in September 2008. I suspect the job losses were very substantial for those sectors from Sept 08 through Jan 09.
 

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The only problem I have with the “magical” unemployment number is it doesn’t reflect those who have exhausted their benefits. They are not considered unemployed.
 

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The only problem I have with the “magical” unemployment number is it doesn’t reflect those who have exhausted their benefits. They are not considered unemployed.

true, but mitigated somewhat by people who are working under the table
 

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The only problem I have with the “magical” unemployment number is it doesn’t reflect those who have exhausted their benefits. They are not considered unemployed.

It also doesn't include those who are underemployed, which I believes exceeds 16% right now (below link is for a Bloomberg article in April...was 15.6% then)


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=washingtonstory&sid=apllk4murp0I

I do wish the media would stop sugar coating things and give us the real facts. Spreading falsities will only prolong this recession and disappoint people more. Americans have been asking for transparency for the last year and this administration has claimed that is what they would deliver. They have been far from delivering on it (and the FASB change for the banks actually made things even less transparent). It would have been better to get the bad news out of the way, to stop with the bailouts, and to allow everyone to move on. This whole charade with the "green shoots", stress test with the unrealistic "worse case" scenario of 10.3% unemployment, and all the hoopla of the recession ending anytime soon is one big boondoggle. Why get people's hopes up and then have them come crashing down yet again?
 

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More economic and unemployment news….

By JONATHAN WEISMAN

WASHINGTON -- Republicans launched a political offensive against President Barack Obama's handling of the economy after weeks of reticence, emboldened by Friday's report of a surging unemployment rate.
Political strategists have been pushing GOP lawmakers to attack Mr. Obama's $787 billion stimulus plan and to challenge how the Democratic Congress has handled everything from taxes to unions to energy policy. At the same time, Republicans have worried such attacks would backfire in the event of a recovery.

With Friday's report that the unemployment rate had jumped to 9.4%, the highest monthly reading since September 1983, Republicans put aside those qualms.

Rep. Dave Camp (R., Mich.), the senior Republican on the House Ways and Means Committee, declared the stimulus plan a failure. House Minority Leader John Boehner (R., Ohio) proclaimed, "Washington is hanging middle-class Americans out to dry."

"This is President Obama's economy now," said House Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R., Va.).

Republicans noted that a report by the Obama transition team in early January said that without a large stimulus plan, unemployment would go above 9%. It is now above that level, despite passage of the stimulus plan, though less than 5% of funds have been spent.

White House economists said Friday that the economic slide built up steam between the time that report was drafted and passage of the plan in February.
Some Republicans have been hammering the president's economic policies for months, saying the White House has been spending hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars with nothing to show for it. But until this week, Republican congressional leaders were more muted.

Christina Romer, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, countered that she saw some positive developments in the numbers.

That reminds me of the 3 Stooges routine were Moe is trying to golf and is taking huge divots. The grounds keeper yells at him, “What are you doing” and Moe replies “I’m practicing and I’m getting better, look the holes are getting smaller”.

The Labor Department reported Friday that job losses slowed to 345,000 -- the first time in six months that monthly payroll losses have been less than a half-million. And for the second month in a row, the labor force actually grew. That helped drive the unemployment rate up, but it also suggested more people are feeling positive enough about the economy to look for work.

So you have to feel positive to look for work? I thought the incentive was to feed your family and keep a roof over your head.

Also, the Bureau of Labor Statistics revised March and April payroll figures to show that the country lost 80,000 fewer jobs than previously thought.

Still, "seeing the unemployment rate hitting 9.4% is incredibly distressing," Ms. Romer said. "It is a high number and there's no way around that."

Vice President Joe Biden called the situation "tough," despite slowing job losses. "Less bad is not how we're going to measure success," he said.

Job-market improvement has always lagged behind economic recovery, often with serious political consequences. In May 1981, President Ronald Reagan faced a 7.5% unemployment rate, which rose to 10.4% in October 1982, before the GOP lost 26 House seats.

Rep. Chris Van Hollen, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, noted that Franklin Roosevelt's Democrats gained seats in the midterm election of 1934, with an unemployment rate over 20%, because voters saw the party as trying to lift the country from a depression not of its making.

"I give the American people a lot of credit in determining who's working hard to get us out of this recession and who's not," the Maryland Democrat said.

Still, the unemployment numbers stirred anxiety on Capitol Hill. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) had to pull a $100 billion war-spending bill from the House floor Thursday after lawmakers revolted over billions of dollars for the International Monetary Fund. :aktion033 The funding is critical if Mr. Obama is to keep a pledge secured by the Group of 20 industrialized and developing nations at the London summit in April.

Objections to the IMF funding are bipartisan. Republican leaders are charging that the money will be used to prop up terrorist organizations like Hezbollah. More than 40 Democrats signed a letter saying the IMF funds should not be approved without assurances that they will be used to stimulate economies in poor countries.
 

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It also doesn't include those who are underemployed, which I believes exceeds 16% right now (below link is for a Bloomberg article in April...was 15.6% then)


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=washingtonstory&sid=apllk4murp0I

I do wish the media would stop sugar coating things and give us the real facts. Spreading falsities will only prolong this recession and disappoint people more. Americans have been asking for transparency for the last year and this administration has claimed that is what they would deliver. They have been far from delivering on it (and the FASB change for the banks actually made things even less transparent). It would have been better to get the bad news out of the way, to stop with the bailouts, and to allow everyone to move on. This whole charade with the "green shoots", stress test with the unrealistic "worse case" scenario of 10.3% unemployment, and all the hoopla of the recession ending anytime soon is one big boondoggle. Why get people's hopes up and then have them come crashing down yet again?

:thumbsup: (<)<
 

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Good article on the FASB changes manipulating bank profitablity
http://bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=alC3LxSjomZ8

Add to this the plunge on consumer borrowing by $15.7 billion and you have to question these moronic talking heads constant blabbering of how more credit is being made available. I know plenty of small business owners still having problems of acquiring credit and I doubt it will end anytime soon. Btw, have any of you had your credit cards canceled by the bank or credit limit reduced lately, even though you've paid on time and have a low credit balance?
 

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I doubt FASB is in bed with Obama, since accountanting organizations tend to be more fiscally conservative. I also believe any changes they propose are not without merit.

One of the biggest complaints that banks had was that they were being forced to write-off performing assets. If that problem has been alleviated, then that makes sense.

You also have to remember they already expensed a lot of underperforming or bad loans, so they already swallowed most of their medicine for the time being. It's not like they were losing money on day to day operations, they were all taking hits on bad loans, some of which are still being paid.
 

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Actually the last comment was more directed at the media cheerleaders who would like everyone to believe everything is rosy again (think people like Bob Pasani and Steve "Lies"man on CNBC).
 

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