U.S. jobless rate understated, study says Labor force participation rates have not rebounded
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - The current low U.S. unemployment rate probably understates the true level of joblessness by 1 to 3 percentage points, the senior economist at the Boston Federal Reserve says.
Millions of potential workers who dropped out of the labor force during the recession four years ago have not returned as expected and are thus not counted in the official unemployment statistics, said Katharine Bradbury in a paper published by the Boston Fed. Read the study.
The jobless rate fell to 5% in June the lowest level since the terror attacks of September 2001.
Labor force participation rates "have not recovered as much as usual and the discrepancies are large," she wrote.
"Current low rates of labor market participation thus potentially represent considerable slack in the U.S. labor market," she wrote.
The amount of slack in the economy is a key variable for Federal Reserve policymakers, who have been raising interest rates for more than a year to return rates to "neutral' levels.
All things equal, the more slack in the economy, the lower rates ought to be.
Some policymakers have argued that the economy is close to full employment with the jobless rate at 5%, thus justifying higher rates to pre-empt inflationary pressures from building in a tight labor market.
While the official unemployment rate has fallen from a peak of 6.3% in June 2003 to 5% in June 2005, the labor force participation rate remains close to 15-year lows of 66%.
Typically, labor force participation rates rebound sharply following recessions, Bradbury found.
The official jobless rate understated the severity of the slowdown in 2001 and has overstated the strength of the recovery since then, she said.
Government unemployment statistics are calculated by asking adults who aren't working if they'd like to work and if they've actively looked for work. Only those who are working or looking are considered in the unemployment rate calculations.
I've been hearing this for quite Awhile that the Unemployment figures were not correct and was'nt sure it was true or not. Now it seems that is true. Could it be that our economy is in worse shape than some would like to let on?