The Fed Governors won’t like this morning’s unemployment report. The U.S. Census Bureau just reported that 263,000 nonfarm payroll jobs were created in November and average hourly wages are still rising 5.1 percent annually.
To make matters worse for the Governors, jobs were created in every job category except retail/trade and transportation/warehousing.
“The unemployment rate was unchanged at 3.7 percent in November and has been in a narrow range of 3.5 percent to 3.7 percent since March. The number of unemployed persons was essentially unchanged at 6.0 million in November,” said the Census Bureau.
What is going on, as I said recently? Short-term interest rates (e.g., that control credit card and auto loan rates) have risen from essentially zero during the pandemic to 4 percent, and the Fed Governors keep threatening to boost them further until consumers cry uncle with their spending and companies stop hiring so many workers!
Top this sign of economic health with third quarter GDP growth just revised higher, and economists now predicting even higher fourth quarter growth—as high as 4.3 percent with the Atlanta Fed’s latest GPNow estimate?
The unemployment rate of 3.7 percent was unchanged and stayed close to a more than a half-century low (really the 1950s). Hourly pay rose 0.6% last month to an average of $32.82. That’s the biggest advance in 13 months, but isn’t that also a result of many states raising their minimum wages to $15 or more from the national 7.25 percent rate that has prevailed since the 1990s (not the red states, unfortunately)?
Hourly pay rose as high as 8 percent in April 2020 when corporations suddenly ramped up production, as portrayed in the enclosed FRED graph, and it started last year’s record growth spurt of 5.7 percent, not seen since the 1960’s high times.
Average wages had been rising no more than 2-3 percent since the Great Recession (large gray bar in graph), and wages make up some two-thirds of production costs, historically. So the Fed is targeting workers’ wages as the main culprit as it has always done. And corporations must stop hiring so many workers, even though the demand for their goods and services is still soaring.
Some (progressive) economists, however, maintain that the main inflation culprit isn’t the workers in wanting higher wages when household incomes are catching up to inflation for the first time since the 1970s. Rather, it’s excessive profiteering of companies, particularly the energy companies riding the wave of higher demand with scarcer resources; but also the supply shortages due to the COVID-19 pandemic that is still limiting supplies and hampering supply chains.
And, we now have a European war causing even more shortages of food and energy supplies.
So, what is the Fed to do with its threats to businesses and consumers that if they don’t stop their spending spree the Fed will cause a recession by raising interest rates too high?
Harlan Green © 2022
Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen
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