Mises Wire

Thanks to the Fed, You'll Work More This Year to Keep Last Year's Standard of Living

According to the establishment survey of employment, released last week by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, total employment increased, month over month, by 263,000 jobs. The job market stays strong,” reads one CNBC headline, and the new jobs print was hailed as a great achievement of the Biden administration by MSNBC pundit Steve Benen.

Yet the employment data is possibly the only data that looks good right now, and that’s not much comfort, since employment is a lagging indicator of the economy’s direction. In fact, if we look beyond the employment survey, what we find is an economy where real earnings are falling, savings are falling, and more people are taking on second jobs to make ends meet.

The first indicator of this is the fact that while total jobs have shown some relatively strong growth, the total number of employed persons has been nearly flat for months, and only last month (September 2022) did it finally return to precovid levels. In fact, the jobs recovery in employed persons took thirty-two months to return to the previous peak. The fabled “V-shaped recovery” promised by advocates of covid lockdowns never materialized. Had there been a V-shaped recovery, employed persons would have recovered to previous peaks by mid-2021. It ended up taking about eighteen months longer than that.

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So, what we’ve really seen is a case in which total jobs—as measured by the establishment survey—have increased more than total employed persons. That suggests the “job growth” is really a matter of people working a second job. Indeed, the anecdotal evidence points toward this being the case. They’re doing it because price inflation means people have to work more to make ends meet.

CNBC reported late last month that

nearly 70 percent of Americans are looking for extra work to combat inflation, according to more than 1,000 full-time workers, part-time workers and unemployed workers surveyed by Bluecrew, a workforce-as-a-service platform, in September.

Already, 85 percent of Americans said they’ve changed their spending habits due to inflation, 72 percent say it’s impacted the way they view their job and 57 percent have sought out new or additional roles in the past year, according to the survey.

CBS also reports:

With U.S. inflation racing ahead [of] worker wages, a growing number of Americans are taking on second jobs to make ends meet.

Many people have already reined in spending where they can, while others have tapped their pandemic savings to cover the rising cost of food, gas, rent and other necessities. Yet the highest inflation in 40 years is weighing heavily on millions of households. Three-quarters of middle-income Americans say they don’t earn enough to pay for the cost of living.

This certainly all makes sense, considering that price inflation in August soared 8.3 percent and growth in average earnings did not keep up.

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This is the “American dream” the Fed has given us: work more jobs and longer hours to keep paying those bills that are now growing at 8 percent per year.

Not surprisingly, real disposable personal income continues to fall. From data released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, we find that real disposable personal income was down by 4.4 percent in August, year over year. Growth has been negative since December of 2021, and it has remained well off trend since that time. And disposable income has gone nowhere since early 2020:

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The personal savings rate has also cratered, falling to 3.5 percent, which is the lowest measured since 2008, when the US was in recession.

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The state of the economy is this: we have one lagging indicator (employment) suggesting that things are going well. Meanwhile, savings are falling, disposable income is falling, and real wages are going down as well.

Moreover, a recession in the coming months is virtually assured, according to indicators from the yield curve and the money supply.

Money supply growth has plummeted in recent months, strongly suggesting a recession is soon to come. The yield curve has also inverted, and in recent decades this has always been followed by a recession.

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Slowing in the market nevertheless has started to become more apparent in recent weeks. Job openings—while still at high levels—fell to a fourteen-month low in August. Earlier this month, Facebook parent Meta announced a hiring freeze. Overall, tech sector payoffs have continued to mount, with other sectors feeling the pinch as well. Peloton, Spotify, Goldman Sachs, and Wells Fargo have announced layoffs in recent weeks. The usual late-boom prohibition on admitting a recession is coming appears to have finally disappeared as well. Jamie Dimon at JPMorgan Chase now predicts a recession by mid-2023. It looks like, outside of retail and hospitality, strong job growth is already over for this cycle.

The US economy is finally experiencing what was already in the cards in late 2019, when numerous indicators pointed toward a brewing recession. This, however, was staved off by the massive amounts of money printing that came with the covid lockdowns and the eighteen months of extreme monetary stimulus that followed.

Now, instead of just a recession, we have a brewing recession plus forty-year highs in price inflation. The only good news in all of this is that the Fed appears to have gotten the message—for now—that inflation is entrenched, strong, and isn’t going away without a sizable amount of monetary tightening. The Fed is the cause of all this, of course, and the only way out now is to pop the bubbles the Fed created.

Wall Street hates to hear this, and that’s why the markets went down in the wake of last week’s “strong” employment report. The fact that job growth still hasn’t tanked tells the Fed that it still hasn’t done enough to end the inflationary boom it created. Wall Street is now addicted to easy money, and that’s what drives the market—not productivity or market fundamentals.

Unfortunately for the rest of us, history suggests that anything other than sky-high interest rates and quantitative tightening is unlikely to bring a quick end to price inflation. The Fed’s slow and steady policy of allowing interest rates to rise is likely to require several years to bring inflation under control. In the meantime, we’re therefore looking at years of elevated inflation and economic malaise.

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