2012年6月1日 星期五

The Spring Slowdown Has Arrived - NYTimes.com by David Leonhardt

2012-06-01

Friday's jobs report was the most important in a while - and it was terrible.

When the jobs market weakened in March and April, economists could tell a sensible story about why the weakening wasn't as severe as it looked. The unusually warm weather had caused people to spend more money than they had planned, pulling forward economic activity - and hiring - into late 2011 and early 2012. The slowdown in March and April seemed as if it might simply be payback, rather than a truly worrisome new trend.

But you can't tell that story anymore. Some combination of problems - Europe's new troubles, the rise in gas prices from several months ago, the continued cuts in government employment, the continued hangover from the financial crisis - has clearly slowed the economy. You can look at either survey that the Labor Department does, of businesses or households, and you can look at any time period. The message is the same.

For the third straight year, the economy has fallen into a spring slump.

Over the last three months, the economy has added an average of only 96,000 jobs a month, down from a three-month average of 252,000 in February. The growth of the last three months is the weakest since August. It's weaker than the three-month growth in most of 2011 and half of 2010.

Job growth in the private sector has slowed, while the federal government and local governments are cutting workers. (State governments are no longer cutting, but they are not adding many, either.)

What happens now? Don't expect much action from Congress, despite the talk you will hear on Friday. The jobs numbers will certainly raise the odds of further action by the Federal Reserve, but it's not clear by how much. Perhaps most important, the decisions of European policy makers loom even larger now.



Source: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/01/the-spring-slowdown-has-arrived/?pagewanted=print

Jobs Forecast Shifts the Electoral Outlook - NYTimes.com by David Leonhardt

2012-06-01

The disappointing jobs report released Friday suggests that the economy is weaker than most analysts thought - and that job growth in coming months will be weaker.

Forecasts from Moody's Analytics, which we are updating weekly on this blog, now suggest that average monthly job growth in the six months before the election will be 157,000. (Those six months include May, the month for which the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its initial estimate this morning.) The forecast is down from 184,000 just a week ago.

Even the newly sober forecast assumes that the economy will pick up next month and add 150,000 jobs, compared with only 69,000 in May. Why the predicted uptick? Moody's economists note that other indicators of the labor market - initial jobless claims, a monthly survey by the payroll processor ADP, regional Federal Reserve surveys, and the pace of growth in gross domestic product - suggest that job growth should be faster than it was last month. "Odds are the labor market is better than it appears, but only modestly," the economists wrote in a blog post on Friday.

Going by history, monthly job growth of 157,000 would suggest that the economy would be roughly neutral in the presidential race, pointing to a very close election. But there is no question that the odds of a 2012 mini-boom that would help President Obama have fallen markedly in the last few months. And unless job growth accelerates substantially - and quickly - from its May pace, the economy will make Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican nominee, a favorite.

"The bottom line is that the U.S. recovery has hit another wall," the Moody's economists wrote. "Until Europe resolves its crisis and U.S. lawmakers address the fast-approaching fiscal cliff, the economy will continue to struggle."



Source: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/01/jobs-forecast-shifts-the-electoral-outlook/?pagewanted=print