Here's for wishing that the BLS had an easier method for pulling data on the birth-death model from their website.
Anyway, this might just be pulling stuff out from nowhere since I didn't extend the series for long enough, but I did some manipulation of the Establishment survey data that came out today to get an idea of what the results would have been if the birth-death model hadn't been adjusting the data. Here's my big problem, when we compare results from now to the last recession, you're not comparing the same thing since the Birth-Death model has been adding jobs. There have been different methodologies over the past 8 years or so, but as they have changed, they have been adding more and more jobs through the BD model. Ideally if you wanted to compare all of the data, you would completely remove the influence of the BD model from non-farm payrolls.
For example, several financial reporters have noted that the decline in this month was not nearly as large as from March to April 2001 when the economy shed 281,000 jobs. The birth death model added 52k in March and 75k in April of 2001 which would mean that the net effect would be losing 304,000 jobs (note that this comparison may not be perfect since the Birth Death figures could be non-seasonally adjusted and I'm looking at seasonally adjusted payroll data). In comparison, the April figure for this year was -20,000 before taking into account the Birth Death model, but -145,000 after. In other words, we lost about half as much as many jobs as the beginning of the last recession. The numbers for Feb-Apr have all been negative and for the year we have lost 457,000 jobs compared to adding 1,090,000 all of last year. In comparison, the first four months of 2001 didn't shed as many BD adjusted jobs. (though most of the job losses came in the second half of that year).
Again, I'm not sure if this analysis is the best, but my point is that you can't compare historical recessions to this one using job data that has been manipulated. So when you hear financial reporters say that the job report isn't that bad, know that they really don't know what they're talking about.
Addendum: if you take everything in non-seasonally adjusted figures (Dec and Jan are vastly different), then March showed 573 after B/D adjustment and April showed 578 afterwards. This is compared to 571 and 382 in March and April of 2001, respectively. Again, you really need to then re-seasonalize the data (by whatever method the BLS does it) to really compare it to what generally gets reported in the financial press.
Showing posts with label Birth death adjustment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Birth death adjustment. Show all posts
Friday, May 2, 2008
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