On The Money — Presented by NRHC — Breaking down the sluggish September jobs report

Happy Friday and welcome to On The Money, your nightly guide to everything affecting your bills, bank account and bottom line. Subscribe here: digital-staging.thehill.com/newsletter-signup.

Today’s Big Deal: The September jobs report showed a labor market still struggling through a resurging pandemic. We’ll also look at the aftermath of yesterday’s debt ceiling deal.

But first, find out why Elon Musk is moving to Texas.

For The Hill, I’m Sylvan Lane. Write me at slane@digital-staging.thehill.com or @SylvanLane. You can reach my colleagues on the Finance team Naomi Jagoda at njagoda@digital-staging.thehill.com or @NJagoda and Aris Folley at afolley@digital-staging.thehill.com or @ArisFolley.

Let’s get to it.

Five takeaways from the September jobs slowdown

The surge of the delta variant kept weighing on the economy in September as the U.S. added just 194,000 jobs last month. While the unemployment rate dropped sharply from 5.2 percent to 4.8 percent, it was largely due to the size of the labor force holding steady. 

Economists had expected a gain of roughly 500,000 after a very disappointing August report, but saw little relief as consumer confidence, school closures and health concerns limited the labor market.

Economists are hopeful that the September jobs report, which is based on surveys conducted  shortly before the peak of the delta surge, marks the worst of the slowdown. President Biden also touted signs of “steady progress,” expressing confidence in an October turnaround.

But the September jobs report highlighted just how hard it is to foster a full recovery without the pandemic under control.

The pandemic is still the primary factor

While the economy recovered much of the damage from the onset of the pandemic, the delta surge has revived several familiar problems. 

Sectors hindered most by health concerns continued to struggle in September, with restaurants and bars seeing no employment growth for the second consecutive month. Employment growth in the food and beverage service industry has been a key bellwether for the recovery from the pandemic, making a second month without gains a cause for concern.

Demographic groups hit hardest by the pandemic also saw disappointing setbacks as delta put the squeeze on the labor market.

While the labor force participation rate stayed roughly even at 61.7 percent last month and 70 percent for men, it fell from 56.2 percent to 55.9 percent for women. Women have been disproportionately more likely to both lose their jobs amid the onset of the pandemic and be unable to return to the workforce because of pandemic-related constraints.

“Nearly 200,000 left the labor force during the month, reversing the gains from August. All of the losses were women,” explained Diane Swonk, chief economist at Grant Thornton, in a Friday analysis.

“Mothers continued to struggle with childcare and the challenge of quarantines after schools reopened. We are still down three million workers from February of 2020; women make up 64% of those workers.”

The Black unemployment rate also dropped by nearly a percentage point, but largely due to a steep decline in labor force participation as well.

Education skews the picture

Jobs in public education fell off a cliff in the September jobs report, declining by 144,000 at a time when the sector is expected to add jobs. But the Bureau of Labor Statistics, along with many private sector economists, attributed the drop to the pandemic’s volatile impact butting heads with seasonal adjustments.

“School staffing fluctuations related to the pandemic have distorted normal hiring patterns – such as back to school hiring that normally happens in September. Seasonal adjustments can further confound these distortions,” said Gordon Gray, director of fiscal policy at the right-leaning American Action Forum.

Gray highlighted the addition of 317,000 private sector jobs, which was in line with August’s revised gain of 332,000 jobs in non-government firms.

A MESSAGE FROM NRHC

We Believe in Rental Housing

Single-family rental home companies are helping residents experiencing economic hardship and ensuring a ready supply of quality, affordable, well-located rental housing.

FEDERAL JOBLESS BENEFITS LAPSING DID LITTLE TO SPUR THE LABOR MARKET

Policymakers were hopeful that many of the 6.2 million Americans who lost their unemployment benefits when federal aid programs expired Sept. 6 would quickly find jobs. That did not appear to happen.

Labor force participation stayed largely flat in September despite the lack of federal benefits, the number of people who would like to work but are not looking for jobs stayed even at 6 million, and 1.6 million Americans remained unable to take a job because of a pandemic-related constraint.

“The larger than expected decline in the unemployment rate should not be much comfort because it was not driven by acceleration in job finding among the unemployed,” said Aaron Sojourner, an economics professor at the University of Minnesota and former economist on the White House Council of Economic Advisors.

“The number of people coming off the sidelines to search fell by 400,000 relative to last month.”

Businesses are still scrambling for workers

Job openings have remained at record highs for several months with millions of Americans still out of the workforce. The high demand for workers has pushed wage growth higher, with average hourly earnings rising by 0.6 percent last month alone. Employees also worked more hours in September as businesses struggling to fill positions leaned heavily on existing staff.

“I suspect many employers hoped to limp through summer without boosting posted wages as fast as required to make new hires, on the hope that [unemployment insurance] cuts and [schools] reopening would lead to a surge in labor supply in the fall,” Sojourner wrote in an email.

“Corporate profits are up. Many companies can afford bigger raises but managers resist baking in higher hourly labor costs.”

This may be the worst report for a while 

If you were looking for the gloomiest time to gauge the health of the labor market in September, the jobs report nailed it.

The Labor Department conducts two surveys to source data for the monthly jobs report around the 12th day of the month. The U.S. was approaching the peak of daily COVID-19 cases driven by the delta variant at the time, and millions of Americans lost their jobless benefits less than a week before.

“The September jobs report is a glimpse in the rearview mirror,” wrote Daniel Zhao, senior economist at Glassdoor, in a Friday analysis.

“Cases of COVID-19 have dropped significantly since the beginning of September and the labor market is likely to return to the same place it was before the Delta surge.”

 

LEADING THE DAY

House to vote Tuesday on debt limit hike

The House will interrupt a scheduled recess next week to vote Tuesday on Senate-passed legislation to extend the debt limit into December. 

The House, which had been long scheduled to be out of session this week and next coinciding with the Columbus Day holiday, is expected to quickly resume its recess as soon as lawmakers clear the debt limit extension Tuesday night.  

“The Speaker [Nancy Pelosi] and I have both spoken with Treasury Secretary Yellen, who said that if the House fails to act next week, the country will be unable to pay its bills. This cannot happen. Therefore, the House will convene on Tuesday, October 12, to pass this stopgap measure, and I expect we will complete our work that evening,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said in a statement. 

How we got here:

  • Earlier Thursday, the Senate passed a short-term debt limit extension in a vote that divided Republicans who had previously vowed to oppose any measure to prevent a default.  
  • While the bill passed along party lines, 50-48, 11 Republicans voted with Democrats to overcome a procedural hurdle that required 60 votes.

 

A MESSAGE FROM NRHC

We Believe in Rental Housing

Single-family rental home companies are helping residents experiencing economic hardship and ensuring a ready supply of quality, affordable, well-located rental housing.

Good to know 

The Organization for Economic Cooperation Development (OECD) announced Friday that 136 countries have agreed to a deal on a global minimum corporate tax of 15 percent.

Here’s what else have our eye on:

  • The Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C., lost tens of millions of dollars in the four years that Former President Trump was in office, even as he was claiming big profits on the operation, according to documents unveiled Friday by Democrats on the House Oversight and Reform Committee.
  • Top executives at some companies received $165 million in bonuses before filing for bankruptcy last year, according to a report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO).

 

On tap next week

Tuesday:

  • The Peterson Institute for International Economics holds a webinar on inflation at 12:30 p.m.

Wednesday:

  • The Bipartisan Policy Center holds a webinar on Social Security and the future of the program at 10 a.m.
  • The House Financial Services Committee task force on artificial intelligence holds a hearing on the ethics of AI at 12 p.m.

Thursday:

  • A House Financial Services subcommittee holds a hearing on the implications of a cashless economy at 12 p.m.

 

That’s it for today. Thanks for reading and check out The Hill’s Finance page for the latest news and coverage. We’ll see you Monday.

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Tags Donald Trump Elon Musk Joe Biden Nancy Pelosi Steny Hoyer

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