Lessons
From the Labor Market
More
than four million children were born in the United States in 1990, the most in
any year since the tail end of the baby boom in 1961. Twenty-two years later,
in 2012, more than 1.8 million will earn a bachelor’s degree and either enter
the workforce or move on to more schooling (graduate school). In addition,
approximately 3.2 million students, most born in 1994, will graduate from high
school this spring, and face the same choices as college grads. While the unemployment
rate for those in the 16-to-24-year-old age group remains disturbingly high,
more education and more skills can raise the odds of landing a job. The good
news is that the latest data on job openings in the economy, as measured in the
Job Openings and Labor Turnover (JOLTS) data, reveals that nearly 3.8 million
open jobs awaited this year’s graduates, the highest number of job openings in
four years. The bad news is that many of those open jobs require skills and
education that may not match this year’s graduating class.
Twenty-two Years Later, Higher Education Continues to be a
Driver for Employers
The
ability to attend and finish college and earn a degree has a major impact on
the unemployment rate. The unemployment rate for people who have earned at
least a college degree is 4.0%, still more than double what it was prior to the
onset of the Great Recession, yet only half the unemployment rate (8.0%) for
those who have graduated from high school, but not earned a college degree.
Your odds of landing one of those aforementioned 3.8 million open jobs are even
worse if you do not have a high school diploma. The unemployment rate for high
school dropouts is 12.5%, 8.5 percentage points above that for those with a
college degree. At its widest during the Great Recession, the difference in the
unemployment rate between those with a college degree or more and those without
a high school diploma was nearly 11 percentage points. The Great Recession, and
its aftermath, has clearly taken a big toll on workers with less education,
fewer skills, and limited experience.
Data
through April 2012 reveals that the overall unemployment rate stood at 8.1%, as
12.5 million people were unemployed out of a labor force of 154 million. The
good news for new entrants to the labor force (essentially high school and
college graduates) is that the unemployment rate among these new entrants was
only 0.9%. The bad news is that this is triple what it was prior to the onset
of the Great Recession and has not been this high on a consistent basis since
the aftermath of the severe 1981 – 82 recession. New entrants to the labor
market today need to have more skills, which often means more education, and
more experience than ever to land that first job.
Those
five million new high school and college graduates in 2012 can expect to look
for work for around 20 weeks, which is the median number of weeks an unemployed
person is looking for work these days. The good news here is that the median
duration of unemployment has come down in recent months and is well below its
Great Recession highs. In the year after the end of the Great Recession, it
took the median unemployed worker 25 weeks to find a job, but at 20 weeks
today, it still takes two-and-a-half times longer than it took to find a job in
the mid-2000s, when the median duration of unemployment was around eight weeks.
As we will see later, in the mid- 2000s, it was relatively easy for an
unskilled worker to step into the labor force to find a job relatively quickly.
The shifting dynamics of the labor market since the mid-2000s mean that more
skills and more education are required today to land a job.
The
latest data on unemployment rates by industry help to tie together some of the
issues previously noted. The unemployment rate in the construction industry,
which stood at less than 5.0% during the peak of the housing boom in mid-2006,
soared more than five-fold to 27% by early 2010. Few other industries suffered
as much during the recession, although the unemployment rate in the financial,
mining, manufacturing, and government sectors were badly hurt as well, with the
unemployment rates in these industries increasing by three and four-fold from
pre-recession levels by early 2010. The economic recovery that commenced nearly
three years ago in June 2009 and the jobs recovery that began in early 2010
have helped to drive the overall unemployment rate down to 8.1% from its peak
of 10%. There were only 2.2 million open jobs when the economic recovery began,
as measured by the JOLTS data, and now there are 3.8 million.
Mining for Jobs
The
general improvement in the economy helped to drive the unemployment rates in
many of the hardest hit industries lower, as well. For example, the
unemployment rate in the mining sector, which soared to over 16% in early 2009
as energy prices and energy demand collapsed, fell to just 4.2% in April 2012,
and is nearly back to its 2004 – 2006, pre-Great Recession average. In fact,
despite numerous regulatory hurdles, the job count in the mining and oil and
natural gas industries has increased by 30% from 2009, and employment in this
industry is well above its prior peak, even as overall employment remains well
below its 2007 peak.
Generally
speaking, jobs in the mining industry require more specialized skills, like
being able to operate the complex machinery in and around a mining or drilling
operation and education. Many of the jobs in the mining industry also require
advanced degrees in engineering and sciences- than most other industries. The
outlook for the growth in this sector of the economy looks promising, given
rising energy prices around the globe and the prospects for more relief on the
regulatory front after the Presidential and Congressional elections in the
fall.
Manufacturing Jobs
Similarly,
the unemployment rate in the manufacturing sector, which surged from under 4%
in 2005 and 2006 to as high as 13% in 2010, has now moved down to under 7%. Job
openings in the manufacturing sector now stand at 326,000, only slightly below
the open manufacturing jobs seen in 2007. Today, there are nearly three times
more open manufacturing jobs than there were at the end of the recession.
As
we have noted in recent Weekly Market Commentaries, the manufacturing sector
has benefitted in recent quarters from a move by some U.S. corporations to
bring manufacturing jobs back to the United States. Political arm twisting,
along with poor quality control overseas, the narrowing wage gap between
workers and the United States and many emerging market nations, and low fuel costs
here in the United States have helped to foster this trend. Although no hard
data exists on this, anecdotal evidence suggests that manufacturing jobs being
“on-shored” require more education and skills than ever before. This helps to
explain the huge gap in the unemployment rate between those with less than a
high school education (i.e. low skills and less educational attainment) and
those with a college degree or higher.
Trimming Jobs from the Budget
The
unemployment rate in the government sector, which hovered around 2% in the
mid-2000s, soared to 6.5% in mid-2011 as state and local governments cut
workers to better align costs (salaries and benefits for government employees)
with lower tax revenues. At nearly 4% today, the unemployment rate for government
workers remains nearly double what it was prior to the recession, but is
unlikely to move down much further given the ongoing budget issues at the
federal and state and local levels. The number of open jobs in the government
sector (per the JOLTS data) stands at around 375,000 jobs, little changed over
the past few years.
Although
the worst may be over in terms of job reductions at the state and local
government level, the outlook for sustained job growth in the government sector
is muted at best. The prospects for more budget cuts at the Federal level in
the next few years (many of which will ultimately filter down to the state and
local level) suggest that only the most highly skilled and highly educated
workers will be likely to hold on to their current jobs, or be hired into new
jobs in this segment of the labor market.
Building New Jobs
The
construction industry was arguably the biggest beneficiary of the housing boom
that began in the late 1990s. In 1992, there were around 4.5 million construction
jobs as the economy struggled to dig out of the 1990 – 91 recession. By the end
of the decade, the number of construction jobs had increased by 50%, to 6.8
million. After a brief lull in the early 2000s, as the economy recovered from
the mild 2001 recession, construction employment increased by another one
million to nearly 7.8 million by 2006. The unemployment rate for construction
workers stood at just 4.5%. At this point, nearly 7% of all private sector jobs
were in the construction industry,
the
highest since the late 1950s. Again, while there is no hard data on this,
traditionally an entry level job in the construction industry was a way for an
unskilled worker to break into the labor force. At the same time, however,
increasingly complex construction methods, regulatory issues, engineering
advances, etc., have also provided plenty of high paying jobs for workers with
a higher level of skills and educational training. In mid-2006, the
unemployment rate for those workers with less than a high school education hit
an all-time low of 5.8%.
Since
then of course, the housing bubble burst, commercial construction dried up, and
construction employment plummeted. From a peak employment level of nearly 7.8
million, the number of persons employed in the construction industry plunged by
30% to 5.4 million by early 2011, a level last seen in the mid-1990s. The
unemployment rate for construction workers moved from 4.5% in 2006 to 27% in
2010, increasing more than five-fold. It stands at 15% today, down from the peak,
but still nearly four times as high as it was in 2006, and approximately double
the unemployment rate for the entire economy. Similarly, the unemployment rate
for those without a high school degree, at 12.5%, is below its peak of nearly
16%, but remains very close to all-time highs. The good news is that the
housing market is in the process of stabilizing nationwide, and construction
employment appears to have stabilized as well. The recent JOLTS data says that
there are nearly 100,000 open construction jobs in the economy today, up from
less than 30,000 in early 2010. At the peak, there were nearly 300,000 open
construction jobs. The economy is unlikely to see that many open construction
jobs anytime soon, but as with the other sectors discussed in this publication,
those most likely to retain their jobs in the highly specialized construction
trades are likely to be those with the best skills and the most education.
On
balance, the labor market continues to track toward a modest pace of job growth
(150,000 to 200,000 net jobs created per month). For the freshly minted high
school and college graduates leaving school and entering the workforce this
spring and summer, the right mix of skills and experience will be necessary to
land that first job. The unemployment rate among people aged 16 to 19 (roughly
equivalent to high school dropout and those with a high school diploma) is a
staggering 25%, down from 27% in 2009 and 2010, but still among the highest
youth unemployment rates on record. For those aged 20 to 24, which includes
some college graduates, the unemployment rate is still a daunting 13.2%, well
off its 2009 – 2010 peaks, but still among the highest on record. The data
suggest that more education, not less, and more skills and work experience will
provide this year’s graduates with a better chance at beating those odds.
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IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES
The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are
not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual.
To determine which investment(s) may be appropriate for you, consult your
financial advisor prior to investing. All performance reference is historical
and is no guarantee of future results. All indices are unmanaged and cannot be
invested into directly.
Job Openings and
Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) is a survey done by the United States Bureau of
Labor Statistics to help measure job vacancies. It collects data from employers
including retailers, manufacturers and different offices each month.
Respondents to the survey answer quantitative and qualitative questions about
their businesses' employment, job openings, recruitment, hires and separations.
The JOLTS data is published monthly and by region and industry.
The economic
forecasts set forth in the presentation may not develop as predicted and there
can be no guarantee that strategies promoted will be successful.
This research
material has been prepared by LPL Financial.
To the extent you are
receiving investment advice from a separately registered independent investment
advisor, please note that LPL Financial is not an affiliate of and makes no
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