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SF Fed paper argues against mismatch

In the November 8 issue of the San Francisco Fed’s Economic Letter, Rob Valletta and Katherine Kuang look at the regional and sectoral behavior of employment and find little evidence for the mismatch employment thesis currently making the rounds. If there were a serious mismatch problem, you’d expect to find major disparities in employment across geography and industry: healthy regions or sectors would show shortages of workers, and sickly ones would show surpluses. But in fact you don’t see that: regional and sectoral variation is little different now from past cycles. Valletta and Kuang conclude that the major reason for persistently high unemployment is cyclical and not structural.

The San Francisco Fed study looks at Beveridge curves. Beveridge curves plot unemployment against job vacancies. In general, the more vacancies there are, the lower the rate of unemployment. Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kochlerlakota’s argument, outlined in a speech he made over the summer, depended heavily on the idea that the Beveridge curve suggests that the unemployment rate should be about 1.5–2.0 points below where it is, which is what leads him to the mismatch conclusion. His curve, though, was based entirely on only the most recent decade’s data.

But there’s nothing at all stable about this relationship over time. The Valletta–Kuang paper includes a graph showing how much the Beveridge curve has wiggled around over the decades. For example, Valetta and Kuang point out that the curve shifted about 4 points to the right between 1960 and the early 1980s before shifting back about 2.5 points by 1989, and that the variation in the NAIRU during that period was considerably smaller than the movement in the curve would suggest. We thought this worth a closer look.

Unfortunately, the JOLTS data only begins in 2000. Most earlier work on the unemployment–vacancy relationship used the Conference Board’s old Help Wanted (HW) index as a proxy for openings. In an earlier paper, Valletta used the period of overlap between the HW series and the JOLTS data to estimate a consistent vacancy rate series going back to 1960. He graciously shared that with us.

In the graph below you will see a set of Beveridge curves by decade—they show that a major cause of the noisiness in the long-term relation is that the vacancy–unemployment connection shifts over time. The r2’s for the decade regressions are a lot better than for the whole series, with most in the high 0.80s/low 0.90s. But there are also some noisy decades: the r2 for the 1970s is just 0.39. The 1980s aren’t so great either, with an r2 of 0.77.

Beveridge-curves-Dec-2

The labor market is usually thought to be functioning better the further down and to the left (i.e., closer to the origin) the Beveridge curve is on the graph. The further out the curve is, the more friction, like regional or sectoral mismatches. The graph for the 2000s (which is based on data through June 2009, when the relationship prevailing earlier in the decade started breaking down) shows a much better-functioning labor market than in earlier decades, especially the 1980s.

Until, that is, we get to recent history, as shown by the dot marking the data for November 2010. It’s about two unemployment points to the right of where the curve suggests it “should” be. But it’s actually lower than the 1980s curve would predict, and not that much higher than the 1970s curve. And those were decades of major structural change in the U.S. economy—periods of major financial and real sector shocks, far more severe than those of the following two decades.

So the recent breakdown in the Beveridge curve looks to us more like a reflection of a major financial and psychological shock (one that has left employers extremely shy about hiring) than some fresh mismatch in the U.S. labor market. The fresh mismatch theory seems especially odd in light of the fact that things seemed to be functioning so well (meaning the Beveridge curve was close to the origin) for so much of the decade until the economy fell apart. The novelty is the having fallen apart, not some recent change in the labor force.

by Philippa Dunne· · 0 comments · Uncategorized

Another reason to fasten your seatbelt

This one from the Saint Louis Fed. They say trend lines never go straight up or straight down, but there are some dizzying graphs posted at the Eighth District’s website where the trend lines do just that.

Here’s a one-hundred year history of borrowing by depository institutions from the Federal Reserve:

Fedborrow

And here’s the flip side, non-borrowed reserves of those institutions:

Fedbognonbr

Some argue that these graphs are misleading since the Fed has turned  itself into a supplier of reserves, and has promised to offset all infusions with sales and redemptions, but that strikes us as making a virtue out of necessity. The graphs accurately reflect a Fed forced onto a path without precedent by extreme stress in the markets, and surely it’s important that prior banking crises barely register against the current situation. And if banks are using emergency funding as a substitute for regular fed funds borrowing, that in itself is major news: banks don’t trust each other, and have to turn to Washington in a pinch (and a painful pinch it is!).

by Philippa Dunne· · 1 comment · Uncategorized

Hindsight can be such a bear

"But a destabilizing contraction in nationwide house prices does not seem the most probable outcome. Indeed, nominal house prices in the aggregate have rarely fallen and certainly not by very much."

Alan Greenspan, May 6, 2004

http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/2004/200405062/default.htm

by Philippa Dunne· · 0 comments · Uncategorized

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by Philippa Dunne· · Comments are Disabled · Uncategorized

Sample Reports

Our work speaks for itself, and here we’ve selected reports that cover a broad range of what we do. If you’d like to see how we did during stretches not included here, please contact us.


01/08/15


Jobs look solid: spiders spin an uneven tale

Arachnophobes beware.
Download TLR 01 08 2015


12/10/14


Wages strive to close the gaps

A look at real wages around the country since the trough. It helps, a lot, if you are sitting on valuable mineral resources. Maps included.
Download TLR 12 10 14


10/14/14


Fiscal drag; oil boost

Our oil call, and what it likely means.
Download TLR 10 14 2014


09/14/14


Work martyrs who can’t buy a house

Surprise: Housing boom/bust mostly about price. Afraid to take a vacation?
Download TLR 9 14 2014


03/12/14


Big freeze in sales tax receipts

“Really, when you look at this graph, you have to wonder how retail sales recovered from their recessionary depths.”<
Download TLR 3 12 2014


12/11/13


Sustainable improvement?

State revenue officials are encouraged by recent receipts. Is confusion giving way to, maybe, some confidence?
Download TLR 12 11 2013


07/31/2013


Waiting for the Jackson Hole research deluge

In 2012 the Jackson Hole meetings produced a slew of critical papers (see below). This year, researchers at the SF Fed cite weakness in wages of recent college grads, the “marginal workers” of the highly skilled, as evidence of continuing weakness in the job market.
Download TLR 07 31 2013


09/13/12


Incomes (& Fed policies?) take a beating

Research from former Fed officials and related academics sounds the alarm: QE can’t make a dent in the unemployment rate, and the FOMC has fewer options than members suggest.
Download TLR 09 13 2012


09/20/2011


The debtless recovery

Deleveraging continues, household balance sheets remain ragged, and corporate America: flush, tightfisted, eyes overseas.
Download TLR 09 20 2011


04/12/11


Crawling back to 2006, or 2004?

Animal dis-spirits: there isn’t a lot of new business formation out there. And please ignore those rumors about a big upward benchmark revision to payrolls. (Rumor? +500K; Reality? -378K.)
Download TLR 04 12 2011


01/13/2009


Sales tax receipts miss lowered forecasts, again

Things do not look good in revenue world. MEW goes negative, and Prof. Curtin, who heads up the UMich Consumer Confidence series, outlines the 5 degrees of discontent. Can’t we just keep it at 4?
Download TLR 01 13 2009


01/08/09


The news will keep getting worse

Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff’s now classic, then new, study of international financial crises was not yet on the national radar screen, but it was on ours. We lay out their findings, and what we believed lay ahead for us, unfortunately we were right on the money.
Download TLR 01 08 2009


04/03/08


Tough love, Swedish style

News that the Fed is studying how Nordic countries handled their early-1990s banking crises cheered the markets, but the enthusiastic bidders must not
have been paying attention to the details. Sweden took a successful and painful stand, which included raising overnight rates 500% to defend the krona.
Can you imagine the Feds raising rates a relatively modest 10% in the current environment?
Download TLR_04_03_08


03/12/08


Can you say, “Housing, gas, and food prices?”

Or, stagflation hits the hotdog.
Download TLR 03 12 2008


01/14/08


Dimmed lights and a giant Grinch

A holiday season only Dr. Seuss’s infamous character could love: electricity prices keeping Christmas lights in storage, mall vacancies at 11-year highs, phones
disconnected over unpaid bills, our recession index moving into full alarm mode, and a giant inflatable Grinch replacing the usual riot of Christmas lights in rural
New York.
Download TLR_01_14_08


01/03/08


Can exports save us from a recession?

We’ve been hearing a lot of talk about how we can  export our way out of this mess, but a look at historical trends doesn’t support that view. State revenue estimators “take the ax” to their forecasts. Oh, and, December
saw a nasty spike in our recession index.
Download TLR_01_03_08


12/12/07


The Italians are coming…to buy Prada!

This is one mighty unusual weak-dollar environment. It’s all about tourists coming here to flex their currencies, which means our manufacturers aren’t getting
much of a boost, and, perhaps oddest of all, challenged Upstate New York is once again BJ’s strongest sales region.  But all that shopping isn’t enough to offset
domestic weakness; use this link to read what out tax contacts are saying about sagging sales tax receipts.
Download TLR_12_12_07


10/11/07


Could it be a recession?

Famous last words! With sales tax receipts plunging, we outline evidence that we are at the edge of a recession.<
Download TLR 10 11 2007


07/05/07


Sittin’ on the dock:

We wrote this report cataloguing the burgeoning costs of our fraying infrastructure, including both the crumbling rocks and gravel and the rusting research edge,
on the Fourth of July as a patriotic plea. Click here to find out why research in "emergent phenomena" is crucial to our maintaining a leading role in the world scientific community.
Download TLR_07_05_07


05/10/06


Edgy debtors and a history book

Although Yale Economist Robert Schiller didn’t utter the words "irrational exuberance," they did summarize his message to the then Fed chair on the day before the latter coined the phrase.  We wrote this report to make sure our readers knew what Dr. Schiller had dug up recently on real estate prices: There’s no real uptrend in housing prices over the last century, and the then-current boom was a real anomaly.
Download TLR051006

by Philippa Dunne· · Comments are Disabled · Uncategorized