This article originally appeared on my site Credit Writedowns
In the past few weeks I have been alarmed about the growing debate about deficits and taxes, so much so that I have moved to a double dip baseline from one of a multi-year recovery. I find it in total disregard of past economic history that we are moving in this direction so quickly.
So, as I marvelled at the wonderful news that unemployment is dipping, I had these disturbing downside scenarios in the back of my head. However, having just looked back at my recent posts on the monthly employment situation report, I can write this post free of that recessionary bias. Below, I will give you a read of these numbers, how they relate to what I have said previously and what I think it means going forward.
The move down to 10.0% and the enormous upside surprise in non-farm payrolls is definitely better than I expected as I said in the links. The worst of this particular downturn is behind us and we are definitely in recovery mode. Click here to see one reason why. The question now should not be about how many jobs we lose but rather how we can accelerate upside and induce more hiring to bring down what seems to be a structurally-high level of unemployment.
Here's what the household survey had to say:
The establishment survey was not as bullish as the household survey but the numbers were very good. Non-farm payrolls barely declined (-11,000) and this was not due to the government's hiring as private NFPs declined only 18,000. On an unadjusted basis, payrolls actually have been increasing since August! Moreover we saw some major revisions to the upside for September and October. And there were more hours worked and better pay per week. That has to be supportive.
My takeaways:
So, there will be no double-dip due to employment in the short-term. However, the threats to a sustained recovery are later in 2010 and 2011. They consist of higher taxes and/or lower spending at the federal level, revenue shortfalls for municipalities and states, writedowns in real estate, and protectionism choking off trade. To prevent a bad outcome, we are going to need to create more jobs than we are doing at present. Incentives via tax credits or a payroll tax deduction are things I have advocated in the past. I also advocate direct government jobs programs.
Most important is the need for the federal government to support states like Georgia, Florida, Ohio, Michigan and California where things are still falling apart. Next year it won't just be California in trouble. You are likely to see across-the-board state and local government tax increases and/or spending cuts and job layoffs again next year just in time for the mid-term elections unless the federal government comes to aid. If the Obama Administration decides to follow the strategy they have committed to, you will have a perfect storm that spells double-dip late in 2010 or 2011.
Therefore, despite the bullish report today, more job creation is needed. Listen to the following 50-minute broadcast on the Diane Rehm Show with three respected economists (Dean Baker, Mark Zandi and Richard Rahn) talking about ideas to create more jobs in 2010.
The Diane Rehm Show: Job Creation
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