explod
explod
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And from Michael Panzer's webpage today, seems a lot of people think the Wall Street numbers are skewed. Anecdotal maybe but a groundswell of opinion from the coalface building up.
How you view today’s jobs report depends on snow.
Coming into today, many economists believed that last month’s storms on the East Coast ”” which occurred right before the Labor Department conducted its monthly jobs survey ”” would temporarily reduce employment by a significant amount. Macroeconomic Advisers, a well-regarded research firm in St. Louis, thought the effect would be between 150,000 and 220,000 jobs lost. Those jobs effectively would have disappeared in February and largely returned in March.
If the storms indeed had a big effect ”” if they cut even 100,000 jobs from payrolls ”” then today’s report counts as very good news. The economy lost only 36,000 jobs last month, far fewer than forecasters expected. That number is based on the monthly survey of businesses.
The monthly survey of households, which allows the Labor Department to calculate the unemployment rate, was even more update. The unemployment rate held steady, and the overall percentage of adults with jobs ”” which does not distinguish between officially and unofficially unemployed ”” rose slightly. All this suggests that the job market may be continuing to improve and that next month’s jobs report is likely to look very good.
But that’s not the only plausible reading of the report. It’s also possible that economists vastly overestimated the snow effect. It’s even possible the snow effect was close to zero. Here is what the Labor Department said in its report today:
In order for severe weather conditions to reduce the estimate of payroll employment, employees have to be off work for an entire pay period and not be paid for the time missed. About half of all workers in the payroll survey have a 2-week, semimonthly, or monthly pay period. Workers who received pay for any part of the reference pay period, even one hour, are counted in the February payroll employment figures. While some persons may have been off payrolls during the survey reference period, some industries, such as those dealing with cleanup and repair activities, may have added workers.