NCCI analyzed BLS employment data and offers the following observations from Stephen Cooper, Executive Director and Senior Economist:
Another disappointing jobs report revealed employment growth of just 22,000 in August. Backward revisions of the previous two months reduced employment estimates by 21,000 on net, with June now seeing a decline.
At the industry level, health care and social assistance and leisure and hospitality services were bright spots, posting strong employment gains of around 47,000 and 28,000, respectively.
Offsetting these gains were declines in other industries; key among them were construction and manufacturing. Construction employment declined for the third straight month, erasing nearly half of its year-to-date gains. Meanwhile, manufacturing employment declined for the fourth straight month and is down nine out of the last 12 months. Manufacturing has lost 78,000 jobs from one year ago.
The unemployment rate rose for the second consecutive month as participation rose, and the rate of hiring continued to slow. New entrants and job seekers may be having a difficult time finding jobs and could continue to push the unemployment rate higher despite little change to the rate of layoffs. Notably, the unemployment rate for 16- to 24-year-olds was 10.5 percent in August compared to 3.6 percent for 25- to 54-year-olds.
The big picture: While disappointing labor market data continues to stack up and NCCI remains cautious on the outlook, it is too early to call for a recession at this time. This string of data may in part reflect elevated economic uncertainty and may reverse with the possible easing of those conditions.



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