Full feedback into labor markets could still be several months away

Oct. 7, 2022

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Job openings are down 1.8 million or 15 percent since March as unemployment rate remains calm—for now

Job openings fell another 1.1 million in August to 10.1 million according to the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Generally, in a recession once jobs openings in the household survey collapse, the unemployment rate will tend to rise as well over time, usually after job openings drop by more than 20 percent in the JOLT survey on an annual basis, as in the 2001 and 2008-2009 recessions. So far, the collapse of openings totals 1.8 million since March 2022, a 15 percent drop, signaling a downturn in labor markets is indeed on the horizon. From a year ago, they’re down 7.6 percent. The news comes as unemployment dipped to 3.5 percent in September, with 204,000 jobs added in the household survey and a loss of 229,000 from the labor force itself, as labor participation dropped 0.1 percent to 62.3 percent. This is what peak employment usually looks like. Before employers begin firing, first they stop hiring.

Cartoon: Beg Back Better

Biden looks to refill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Video: Biden Actually Pardoned Smugglers

Biden may be able to virtue signal that he fulfilled another campaign promise, but what he actually did was release drug smugglers from federal prison in the middle of a fentanyl crisis.

Biden releases drug dealers and smugglers under guise of federal release of marijuana convicts

Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning: “President Biden’s decision to order the release of federal inmates convicted of marijuana offenses demonstrates either a willful disregard for the truth or a dangerous political blindness. People caught smoking a joint on the corner are not in federal prison. People who are smuggling drugs are. The fact is that it is easier to convict someone of simple possession than it is to prove that someone is smuggling, so oftentimes, the crime is pled down by the defendant to get a shorter prison term. It is irresponsible and dangerous to release thousands of major drug smugglers and dealers onto the streets of America.”

Job openings are down 1.8 million or 15 percent since March as unemployment rate remains calm—for now

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By Robert Romano

Job openings fell another 1.1 million in August to 10.1 million according to the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Generally, in a recession once jobs openings in the household survey collapse, the unemployment rate will tend to rise as well over time, usually after job openings drop by more than 20 percent in the JOLT survey on an annual basis, as in the 2001 and 2008-2009 recessions.  

So far, the collapse of openings totals 1.8 million since March 2022, a 15 percent drop, signaling a downturn in labor markets is indeed on the horizon. From a year ago, they’re down 7.6 percent.

The news comes as unemployment dipped to 3.5 percent in September, with 204,000 jobs added in the household survey and a loss of 229,000 from the labor force itself, as labor participation dropped 0.1 percent to 62.3 percent.

This is what peak employment usually looks like. Before employers begin firing, first they stop hiring. There were times during the Obama administration when jobs openings would briefly crater to 0 percent or slight negative growth in job openings, but never into recession territory, which requires a sustained decline. 

Undoubtedly, the unemployment report will cause many to question the recession signal by the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of negative growth in the first and second quarters of 2022.

The last 12 times in economic history the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported consecutive quarters of negative growth like the last two quarters, there was indeed a recession.

But unemployment is still a lagging indicator. Even in Europe, where the war in Ukraine is causing massive energy shortages and price inflation, unemployment remains low even as analysts say a big recession is dead ahead.

The other factor to consider is inflation itself, which remains high as the U.S. economy continues overheating. Usually in a recession, price increases will slow down, but they’re still heating up in several sectors even as demand is already falling.

Interest rates continue rising as well. Usually, in recessions, they begin declining too amid a flight to safety.

A good way to think about the relationship between high inflation and recessions is the way the household budget works. When prices increase faster than incomes, households will tend to take on more debt, which ultimately will constrain the growth of purchases until eventually, they can make no more purchases without paying off debt. When that happens nationally, consumer spending takes a hit.

That process is already underway. But the full feedback into labor markets could still be several months away as the crisis in Europe worsens. It looks more like a question not of if, but when. Stay tuned.

Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government Foundation.

To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2022/10/job-openings-are-down-1-8-million-or-15-percent-since-march-as-unemployment-rate-remains-calm-for-now/

 

Cartoon: Beg Back Better

By A.F. Branco

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Click here for a higher level resolution version.

To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2022/10/cartoon-beg-back-better/

 

Video: Biden Actually Pardoned Smugglers

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To view online: https://www.facebook.com/reel/427066209366256/

 

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Biden releases drug dealers and smugglers under guise of federal release of marijuana convicts

Oct. 6, 2022, Fairfax, Va.—Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning today issued the following statement on President Joe Biden’s decision to pardon marijuana possession offenders:

“President Biden’s decision to order the release of federal inmates convicted of marijuana offenses demonstrates either a willful disregard for the truth or a dangerous political blindness.

“People caught smoking a joint on the corner are not in federal prison.  People who are smuggling drugs are.  The fact is that it is easier to convict someone of simple possession than it is to prove that someone is smuggling, so oftentimes, the crime is pled down by the defendant to get a shorter prison term.

“It is irresponsible and dangerous to release thousands of major drug smugglers and dealers onto the streets of America.  Last year, the CDC reports that more than 107,000 Americans died from overdoses, up more than 30,000 from when President Trump was in office and more than 50,000 since 2019 when the COVID lockdown policies began.

“Today Joe Biden chose to put thousands of drug dealers and smugglers back onto our streets without any attempt at individually reviewing their cases or any selection process to try to determine the circumstances surrounding their conviction.

“Drug smugglers don’t specialize in what they transport.  Today fentanyl, largely made in China, is responsible for about half the drug deaths.  Rather than pandering to the pot lobby, if the president were doing his job, he would be doing everything possible to shut down the international supply chain for fentanyl, whether it be through cargo ships from China or coming across our southern border.

“Instead, he chose to release thousands who afflicted a previous generation through their crimes.  If Biden had taken a careful path by examining the records of individual inmates and pardoning those who had proven good records in prison and/or were the very small minority whose only offense involved small quantities of marijuana, my criticism would be muted.

“But this indiscriminate prisoner release without regard to the extent of their dope smuggling and sales is reprehensible and a slap in the face to those families, neighborhoods and communities that are being overrun by the drug crisis.”

To view online: https://getliberty.org/2022/10/biden-releases-drug-dealers-and-smugglers-under-guise-of-federal-release-of-marijuana-convicts/

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