CBS NEWS
(MoneyWatch) - The Labor Department said 157,000 jobs were created in January
and the unemployment rate edged up to 7.9 percent from 7.8 percent.
There were positive revisions to November and December, which amounted
to an extra 127,000 jobs. Those revisions are consistent with recent
data that showed firming throughout the month: Weekly claims dropped to
the lowest level since 2008; manufacturing reports have been improving;
and the National Federation of Independent Business showed small business hiring edged up.
The
Labor Department also released its annual benchmark revisions: From
April 2011 to March 2012, the economy added about 422,000 more jobs than
previously reported and for 2012, the economy added an average of
181,000 jobs a month, an improvement from the 153,000 pace originally
reported. Additionally, there was real progress in the average duration
of unemployment, which dropped to 35.3 weeks, the lowest level since
January 2011.
But there is still a long way to go after the
deepest recession since the Great Depression: 8 million jobs were lost
in 2008 and 2009, before the recovery created 5 million over the last
three years. Additionally, 12.3 million Americans out of work and of
those, 38 percent have been without work for over six months.
Businesses
complain that it's tough to make hiring decisions when the economy is
only growing by 2 to 2.5 percent annually. 80 percent of small owners
surveyed said they made no changes in their employment levels in recent
months, due to caution about the economy. Whether that caution can be
attributed to political uncertainty surrounding the fiscal cliff, the
debt ceiling and other Washington battles, is tough to know. What is
certain is that as the nation prepares for $110 billion worth of across
the board spending cuts in March ("sequestration"), there is little
expectation for a growth surge that would help create jobs.
Many have brushed aside the lousy fourth quarter GDP
(the economy shrank by 0.1 percent) report as a one-off event, driven
lower by a drop in defense spending and inventories. At the Fed's policy
meeting this week, the central bankers noted the recent "pause" in
economic activity is temporary. It could be that Q3 and Q4 were both
anomalies. When averaged, the numbers are fairly consistent with the
first half of the year. What's more important is that even if the
preliminary fourth quarter GDP is revised higher from the initial
reading of -0.1 percent annualized growth, 2013 is unlikely to produce
the number of jobs needed to move the needle on the unemployment rate.
Maybe
we should be thankful that the numbers are slowly improving. But with
so many still out of work, it's hard to get out the pom-poms. Without a
real jobs initiative (it's hard to count the president's recently-disbanded jobs council as a significant effort), it's hard to see how the jobs situation will dramatically improve any time soon. As a result, the long slog continues.
January jobs report
-- Jobs created: +157K (Revisions from Nov and Dec: +127K)
-- Private jobs created: +166K
-- Government jobs lost: -9K
-- Unemployment rate: 7.9 percent (from 7.8 percent; rate has been 7.7 - 7.9 percent since September, 2012)
--
Broad unemployment rate: 14.4 percent (includes the official rate plus
"marginally attached workers," those who are neither working nor looking
for work, but say they want a job and have looked for work recently;
and people who are employed part-time for economic reasons, meaning they
want full-time work but took a part-time schedule instead because
that's all they could find)
-- Total unemployed: 12.3 million
-- Long-term unemployed: 4.7 million, representing 38.1 percent of the total unemployed
-- Average duration of unemployment: 35.3 weeks, lowest since January 2011.
--
Participation rate: 63.6 (below the 66 to 67 percent rate that was
normal over the last 20 years; 2/3 of recent decline is due to
demographics)
-- Average work week: 34.4 hours
-- Hourly earnings: $23.78 (Over the past 12 months, up 2.1 percent)
-- Retail: +33K
-- Construction: +28K (since Jan 2011 lows, up 296K; still 2 million fewer jobs from April 2006 peak)
-- Health services: +23K
-- Manufacturing: unchanged