What Is the Real Unemployment Rate? - YouTube

Channel: vlogbrothers

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Good morning, Hank. It's Tuesday!
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So last week the Bureau of Labor Statistics
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announced that in the US in December the unemployment rate was 4.7%,
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close to the lowest it's been in nine years
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and fairly close to the lowest it's been since the early 1970s
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but you may have also heard that the real unemployment rate in the US
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is 6% or 9.2% or 20% or even 38%
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and to me this seems like one example among many
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of how in our current political discourse different people
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are reaching vastly different conclusions because they're all looking at different sets of data
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and until we agree on what the facts are
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we can't meaningfully discuss what they mean.
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Let's start with that 38% number.
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This refers to the labor force participation rate,
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which is a measure of how many Americans over the age of 18 (correction: 16) are either
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working or actively looking for work.
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Now, as you can see this rate has declined quite a bit over the last 20 years,
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from over 67% to under 63%
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but by far the biggest reason for this decline
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is that Americans are getting older which means that
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a higher percentage of them have retired.
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But even if you look at the labor force participation rates of people
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between the ages of 25 and 54 that rate has also declined
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about 1.5% since the great recession and about 3.5% since its height in the late 1990s.
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What's the deal there? Well, the two biggest factors seem to be
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more people choosing to be full-time parents,
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and more students in professional and graduate schools.
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According to the most recent data
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90 of the 95 million Americans not in the workforce say they 'do not want a job now,'
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but the remaining five million people of course it a LOT of people
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like it's 3% of the total US labor force
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and some portion of declining labor participation
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is probably due to lack of job opportunities. People might have retired earlier
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than they otherwise would've because they lost a job,
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or they might be in graduate school, but
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they could be tempted into the workforce for the right opportunity, etc.
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Now, smart people disagree about how much of the declining labor participation
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is attributable to the economy but on its own
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that statistic does not tell us much about unemployment.
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For one thing, the labor force participation rate will
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continue to decline as the population continues to age
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whether the economy is good or bad.
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But also if you're gonna claim that the real
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US unemployment rate is 38%
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that means back in 1967 it was 41%
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and that the lowest the U.S. unemployment rate has ever been is 33% in 2000.
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So let's move on to actual measures of unemployment.
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Every month, the U.S. Census Bureau surveys 60,000 households to find out how many people are out of work,
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and then on the first Friday of every month they release six different unemployment rates
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because nothing is ever easy, but for our purposes only four of them matter.
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First you have U3, which is the official unemployment number.
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It includes all adult civilians who are without work and have looked for a job within the last four weeks.
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That's the number that is currently 4.7%
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Then you have U4, which adds in so-called discouraged workers: people who are without jobs
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but have stopped looking for work because they don't believe there are any jobs they can get.
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Adding them in raises the current unemployment rate to 5%,
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and then U5 adds in so-called marginally attached workers
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who are people who want to be in the work force but haven't recently sought jobs
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because they are taking care of family responsibilities or taking classes,
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and they bring the unemployment rate up to 5.7%.
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And then, lastly, U6 includes people who work part time but want to be working full time.
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Including them brings the current unemployment rate up to 9.2%.
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So which of these is the real unemployment rate?
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Well, it depends on what you're trying to measure.
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The U3 number is useful for one thing because it's closely aligned with international standards,
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which allows us to compare our unemployment rate to that of other countries.
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Like in Brazil, a similar measure has the unemployment rate at 12%;
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in Germany it's 4.1%; in Spain it's 19%.
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But the U6 number is also useful because it helps us to understand how much so-called 'slack' there is
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in the labor market. That is, how much room there is room there is for job growth
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As you can see U3 and U6 basically track together
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but there are slight differences, like the distance between U3 and U6 is currently slightly higher
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than it was before the 2009 recession, indicating that there may be more room for job growth than the U3 number would have us conclude.
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The most important thing, though, is that when talking about our unemployment rate,
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we can't compare oranges with grapefruits, and unfortunately
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that's happening a lot in our political conversations right now.
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You might hear for instance that at the height of the recession
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unemployment was 10%, and now it's only down to 9.2%,
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but that's mixing unemployment measures.
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If the unemployment rate is currently 9.2%, it was 17% at the height of the recession.
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And if it was 10% at the recession's peak, it is currently 4.7%.
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By either measure, the unemployment in the United States is lower than
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the average has been since World War Two but it's still somewhat higher than full employment.
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But of course, that's only part of the picture because people don't just need jobs. They need good ones.
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On that front, the recovery from the recession is probably still unfinished.
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Median household incomes are likely still lower than they were in 2007, although we don't have the final data for 2016 yet.
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So in summary, no matter how you measure it, US employment is low
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but could be lower, and median household income is rising, but not yet to all-time highs.
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And if we could agree on these facts,
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maybe we could move forward with the discussion about how to continue
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or even expand this economic recovery.
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Okay, non-American nerdfighters, I am sorry that this was such an American video,
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but we're having just a smidge of a political discourse crisis over here.
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Let me know in comments what non-American topics I could cover next week to make it up to you.
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Okay Hank, I'm off to go see the movie for Hidden Figures for a second time
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because I liked it that much. Maybe also let me know in comments what your favorite Oscar-contending movies are
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my favorites are Hidden Figures and Moonlight.
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Hank, thanks for keeping me employed all these years.
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I'll see you on Friday.