What’s Killing Jobs and Stalling the Economy

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By MARIE-JOSEÉ KRAVIS

June 3, 2016 6:29 p.m. ET222 COMMENTS

An economy that has struggled for growth for seven years showed fresh signs of trouble Friday with a sobering jobs report. Nonfarm payrolls climbed by a mere 38,000 in May—the fewest since September 2010. The Bureau of Labor Statistics also reported that a record 94,708,000 Americans were not in the labor force last month, as the labor-force participation rate fell to 62.6%, from 63% two months earlier.

When thinking about what has stymied the U.S. economy, I sometimes recall a biology lesson about the role that cell death plays in explaining embryonic development and normal growth of adult tissue. In economics, as far back as Joseph Schumpeter, or evenKarl Marx, we have known that the flow of business deaths and births affects the dynamism and growth of a country’s economy. Business deaths unlock resources that can be allocated to more productive use and business formation can boost innovation and economic and social mobility.

For much of the nation’s history, this process of what Schumpeter called “creative destruction” has spread prosperity throughout the U.S. and the world. Over the past 30 years, however, with the exception of the mid-1980s and the 2002-05 period, this dynamism has been waning. There has been a steady decline in business formation while the rate of business deaths has been more or less constant. Business deaths outnumber births for the first time since measurement of these indicators began.
Equally troubling, the latest analysis of Census Bureau data by the Economic Innovation Group points to the increasing concentration of new business formation in a smaller number of U.S. counties. The findings show that 20 counties account for half of new businesses and that most counties had fewer business establishments in 2014 than in 2010. Even accounting for so-called dynamic counties, the total number of firms in the U.S. remains lower than it was in 2004.
As the Economic Innovation Group shows, the 1990 recovery registered a net increase of over 420,000 business establishments, or a 6.7% increase. The numbers for the 2000 recovery were 400,000 and 5.6%. Since 2010, the number of new business establishments has grown by only 166,000 or 2.3%.

One explanation for this subpar new business formation is the overall pallid U.S. recovery. Today’s new-normal 2%-growth economy doesn’t inspire vigor or confidence. Likewise the collapse, until very recently, of real-estate values, and the imposition of tougher standards on personal credit cards, have constrained traditional sources of credit for startups. Banks have tightened lending criteria and many regional and community banks have disappeared.

Many studies have also attributed the slow rate of business formation to the regulatory fervor of the past decade. Some point to the deadening effect of the Dodd-Frank law, which is 23 times longer than the Glass-Steagall Act passed in response to the 1929 Depression. One part of Dodd-Frank, the so-called Volcker rule pertaining to bank investments, has 1,420 subsections. Then there is the Affordable Care Act.

It is not clear to what degree these laws affect business formation, but in a 2010 report for the Office of Advocacy of the U.S. Small Business Administration, researchers at Lafayette University found that the per employee cost of federal regulatory compliance was $10,585 for businesses with 19 or fewer employees, compared with $7,755 for companies of 500 employees or more. Large and established businesses navigate through rules and compliance requirements. Small and new businesses often find them prohibitive.
Don’t just blame the feds. State and local regulators have also hampered new business initiatives, notably through the growth of occupational licensing. In 1950, 5% of workers required a license or certificate. Today that number is close to 30%. Fortunetellers, party planners, florists, shampoo assistants, cosmetologists, manicurists, beekeepers, librarians and many others have joined the ranks of licensed workers. As the rate of private-sector unionization has fallen, occupational licensing has become a new barrier to entry into the workplace and a tool to protect incumbents from competition.

Consumer protection from shoddy services, dangerous products, health and safety hazards is essential. But as the Texas Supreme Court showed in a recent ruling that licensing of eyebrow-threading is “useless,” licensing often has less to do with public safety and more with handicapping competitors. Fear of the gig and sharing economy, and growth in teleworking across state or local boundaries will undoubtedly stir existing businesses to step up their self-protective lobbying.
A July 2015 White House study found that licensing requirements vary substantially by states, irrespective of political leadership. Ohio imposes licenses on 33.3% of workers; in Florida it’s 28.7%; in California, 20.7%; and in Nevada, 30.7%. Sixty occupations are regulated in some way in all 50 states, with 1,110 occupations regulated in at least one state.

Certain demographic groups, such as immigrants and military spouses, are more heavily penalized by these licensing measures. For immigrants, the tedious and costly process of obtaining a license often delays their integration into the workforce. Thirty-five percent of military spouses work in professions that require state licenses, but they are also more likely to move across state lines than civilian counterparts, requiring multiple and lengthy relicensing reviews.

This is clearly an area for bipartisan action to harmonize regulatory requirements among states, increase multistate compacts to promote greater mobility and impose sunset reviews of licensing requirements.

Another troubling economic undercurrent is the decline of churn in the labor force. The flow of unemployed to employed has declined from close to 30% in 2007 to 16% at the trough of the recession to roughly 20% over the past two years. There has been a shift from full-time to part-time work, and the flow of workers to and from jobs has been dropping since the early 2000s, despite the drop in the unemployment rate.

In every quarter during the 1990s, six of every 100 workers moved to new jobs, while 5.5 out of 100 workers left their jobs. When they are not fired, many employees move from firm to firm, or different jobs within their firm in search of broader experience, better pay, better prospects for career-building and advancement or greater compatibility with personal needs. Historically, young firms have been dynamic job creators, but they now account for a smaller share of new hires, down from about 38% in the late 1990s to roughly 33% today, according to the Kauffman Foundation.

March data from the Labor Department’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey showed that 5.3 million workers moved to a new job, down from 5.5 million in February. Close to five million left their jobs compared with 5.2 million in February. The good news was that there are now 1.4 unemployed workers for every available job, down significantly from 6.7 workers for every available job at the worst of the recession, and that 60% of workers are changing jobs willingly.

The ominous news is that these improvements haven’t been accompanied by sustained productivity growth. Measuring productivity is the subject of much debate, and there is considerable dispute about the impact of technology. Nevertheless, almost three decades of slower churn in the flow of business formation and business deaths, of less-dynamic labor markets, and of flat income growth point urgently to the need for better policy.

Washington and state governments need to wake up and remove obstacles to investment, new business formation and labor mobility. Encouraging investment in human capital and productive infrastructure is essential, and so is moving to financial and interest-rate conditions that promote investment and growth. That might give American investors and workers the bounce they deserve. What we’ve been doing so far hasn’t worked. Time for something new?

http://www.wsj.com/articles/whats-killing-jobs-and-stalling-the-economy-1464992963




 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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It's not Rocket Science, is it, it's something any businessman can tell, just plain old common knowledge for some

1) business startups are mostly down for 3 decades, with the exception of the mid 1980's and 2002-2005

2) Obama's 2% rate of economic growth "new reality" doesn't inspire risk

3) Obamacare and new regulations hurt economic growth

4) consumer protection laws hurt consumers' ability to obtain credit

I live this stuff, my boots are on the ground, my political adversaries need government solutions for themselves which fail the taxpaying citizens who actually contribute to GDP

Over the years, I have made the very same arguments the author of this article makes. I tried my best to educate those that need some education, but I have admittedly failed in that task. Muck like their public school teachers failed them
 

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95,000,000 Americans are not in the labor force, WTF?

The labor participation rate continues to diminish, falling to 62.6%




of course, libtards are happy with the declining LPR, it means Obama's UE decreases, fucking idiots
 

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Donald J. TrumpVerified account@realDonaldTrump
We just had the worst jobs report since 2010.
 

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I caught the tail end of a story on CNN Headlines news this morning where a reporter said the Verizon strike affected the may number. But she didn't elaborate so I'm unsure if the claim is supported. I can't make the connection myself.
 

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I caught the tail end of a story on CNN Headlines news this morning where a reporter said the Verizon strike affected the may number. But she didn't elaborate so I'm unsure if the claim is supported. I can't make the connection myself.

the verizon strike, so predictable and so pathetic

there are lots of strikes in this country, it's a recurring event

there's always seasonal UE as well



did the fucking libtarded idiot suggest the Presidential election season is inflating those pathetic numbers? it would be consistent with the idiocy she spewed, just a different result

another example of why we're so uninformed as a nation, liberal spin 24/7
 

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Jobs Roar Back With Gain of 287,000 in June, Easing Worry

By PATRICIA COHENJULY 8, 2016
14’15’16+300+200+100-100Change in jobsIn thousands+287,000June
’14’15’164.55.56.5Unemployment rate4.9%JuneJune


Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics


Quashing worries that job growth was flagging, the government on Friday reported that employers increased payrolls by 287,000 in June. The arresting surge comes as Republicans and Democrats fine-tune the economic messages they plan to deliver at their conventions later this month.
The official unemployment rate did rise to 4.9 percent, from 4.7 percent, but that was largely because more Americans rejoined the work force. And average hourly earnings ticked up again, continuing a pattern of rising wages that brought the yearly gain to 2.6 percent.
“Wow, this one takes my breath away,” said Diane Swonk, an independent economist in Chicago.
An unexpectedly grim employment report in May combined with Britain’s vote to leave the European Union had fanned wider concerns that the American economy was in danger of stalling. During its meeting last month, the Federal Reserve decided to postpone increasing its benchmark interest rate.
But the latest Labor Department report, Ms. Swonk said, gives the Fed “a cushion” to consider a bump in rates later this year.
Financial markets rallied on the announcement, with stocks up more than 1 percent at midday on Friday.
The Democrats are best poised to take advantage of the positive news.
Lynn Vavreck, a professor of political science at University of California, Los Angeles, said that when it comes to presidential elections, the economic trend is more important than any particular number. “As long as it’s going in the right direction,’’ she said, “that’s a good sign for the incumbent party.”
Every monthly jobs report provides only a fleeting and incomplete picture, and a strike by more than 35,000 Verizon workers had artificially held down May’s totals. Concerns persist about the vitality of the economic recovery, which reached the seven-year point this month.

But Friday’s report, with the largest single monthly job expansion since October 2015, helped whisk away some of the cloudiest forecasts. The three-month average of monthly gains rose to 147,000, after taking into account the Labor Department’s revised estimates that showed 6,000 fewer jobs were created in April and May than previously reported. June’s figures will be subject to two more revisions.
“This report should ease any fears that a persistent slowdown or recession is coming soon in the U.S.,” said Dean Maki, chief economist at Point72 Asset Management. “The service sector is where the real strength is, with 256,000 hires. But the gains were widespread across sectors.”
Mr. Maki pointed out that the vigorous report was in line with several other encouraging signs. New claims for unemployment benefits have stayed at rock-bottom levels. Consumer spending is strong. The manufacturing and service industry indexes have jumped. And the number of unfilled jobs, 5.8 million in April, is at a record since the survey began.
Hillary Clinton, the Democratic standard-bearer, has emphasized the steady economic improvements during President Obama’s two terms and the steep decline in the jobless rate from the recession’s peak of 10 percent.
While acknowledging the economy “isn’t yet where we want it to be,” Mrs. Clinton has argued that the United States is “stronger and better positioned than anyone in the world.” She has endorsed a higher minimum wage, expanded paid leave, more money for job training and a multibillion-dollar infrastructure plan.
Photo
09JOBS-1-master675.jpg


Striking Verizon workers were missing from the May employment numbers, but they have returned to work.CreditNicole Bengiveno/The New York TimesMany Americans, though, particularly those with fewer skills and less education, have yet to enjoy the recovery’s rewards. Their deep-rooted discontent with the economy has been repeatedly voiced by the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, Donald J. Trump, who has opposed what he calls “job-killing” trade deals. He has promised to impose high tariffs as a way of reversing the decline in manufacturing jobs, and to deport immigrants.
There are other weak spots. Republicans can point out that real median household income is lower than it was a decade ago. And a broader measure of unemployment that includes discouraged job seekers, as well as those who would prefer to work full time instead of part time, is still nearly twice the official rate, despite ticking down to 9.6 percent in June.
The proportion of people employed or actively looking for work has also been dragging along at low levels, suggesting that more people would return to the work force if desirable jobs were available.
Tom Perez, the labor secretary, conceded there was “still a lot of work to do.”
Unemployment for African-Americans, for example, whose jobless rate is typically about twice that for white Americans, rose last month to 8.6 percent from 8.2 percent.
But Mr. Perez scoffed at Republican complaints that the economy was at a standstill. “I think they were wrong,” he said.
Though the jobless rate, which is based on a separate survey of households, rose in June, it “went up for a good reason,’’ Mr. Perez said. ‘‘We’ve got more people looking for work and re-entering the work force.”
The tighter labor market is nudging up wages. David Lukes, chief executive of Equity One, a commercial real estate investment company, is one of several employers who said they have increased salaries and benefits to retain current staffers and attract new ones.
“I’ve had the troubling experience of losing good employees,” said Mr. Lukes, who has offered perks like flexible hours and stock incentives to keep the competition at bay. “Reward programs are much more important than they were three, four and five years ago.”
He said that for the kind of workers he was looking for — administrators, sales representatives, accountants, paralegals, construction managers — the labor pool is not that deep.
Given that the jobless rate has consistently been at 5 percent or lower since last fall, several economists argue it is time to adjust the benchmarks for what is labeled a strong or weak report.
“There’s no question that job growth is significantly slower today than it was one or two years ago,” when the average monthly gain routinely topped 200,000, Andrew Chamberlain, chief economist at Glassdoor Economic Research said. “But that is to be expected at this point in the economic cycle.”
Taking account of the growing numbers of retiring baby boomers and the population growth, a monthly gain of 75,000 to 100,000 jobs is sufficient to keep the unemployment rate steady, Mr. Maki at Point72 Asset Management said.
Ian Siegel, co-founder and chief executive of ZipRecruiter, which aggregates job postings and distributes them to job seekers, said that demand was down from the peaks of 2015, but hiring was still strong in health care and warehousing.
Steve Rick, chief economist at CUNA Mutual Group, which provides insurance and financial services for credit unions nationwide, said: “I travel all over the country and everywhere I go, I sit down with C.E.O.s and ask them what their No. 1 problem is. They say, ‘Just finding qualified people, from a teller to a mortgage home officer.’”
Correction: July 8, 2016
Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article misstated when the economic recovery began. It was in June 2009; it is not in its seventh month.




 

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No charges for Hillary, positive poll for Vitterd, trump failing, Vitterd plus money in baseball, jobs surging, economy picking up.

What a week for RX conservatives. No wonder you see so many threads where they are in free fall meltdowns.
 

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