Jul

9

what could make it go up? real wages? repatriation of companies? a better modus operandi how employees are treated? those graphs should be on a front page of WSJ and not how to send more arms to Ukraine.

A reader writes:

How about ending or at least curtailing the welfare state. It is mind boggling to count all the handouts and public assistance that otherwise middleclass people drink up. Look at various housing assistance programs, prescription drug benefits, free breakfasts and lunches. It has gone from helping the truly misfortunate to subsidizing at least half the country.

Alex Forshaw comments:

What's the issue? It went from 63.5% to 62.5% in 7 years. Probably entirely explained by avg age / boomers (who stick around longer than priors) finally aging out.

Nils Poertner responds:

why? there is monster public and private debt plus tons of entitlements…and then we are at the beginning of a long rise in yields (nominal and real) - so better to have a high participation rate. same as in Europe.

Zubin Al Genubi writes:

Its demographics and those are hard to change. Immigration would help, as would education.

George Zachar clarifies:

please only look at the PRIME AGE labor force participation rate, ages 25-54.

Larry Williams offers:

Prime age rate looks strong:

Bud Conrad asks:

So now what does this mean? The almost pre pandemic participation level suggests that the populace is finding jobs, and that the economy is not in such bad shape.

But I see:
- Inflation wiping out savings, Real wages declining from inflation, Rising Rates changing basic discount rates making stocks vulnerable, Demand destruction from rising prices. Import prices rising faster than US CPI, (CPI is cooked books lower than reality closer to 20% per year), Deglobalization.
- Many of the bubbles popping in the last six months: Stocks, Bonds, Cryptos, High yield debt, Housing starting down, and the reaction of collapsing Consumer confidence, Earnings in contraction.
- Debt overhang indicating generational Sovereign Debt collapse (Over 100% of GDP in US).
- Failure of Fed and its sham of fixing inflation, which it can't. Probable Fed "pivot" this fall and returning to money creation to fund the government deficits. Displeasure with the government.
- Tax receipt decline from less income (Bill Rafter's detailed work). International conflict, (Russia, China).

Is the participation rate more important or a better indicator or more predictive than all the other problems?

George Zachar adds:

and the cleanest measure imnsho is the prime age employment/population ratio, which sidesteps the issue of who is technically counted as being in the 'labor force'.

the labor market is quite healthy. otoh, pmi new orders are collapsing. the former lags, the latter leads.


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