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   Message 26,788 of 27,547   
   Biden the bullshitter to The Morlock   
   Re: 500,000 jobs could disappear in dram   
   13 Sep 23 09:56:45   
   
   XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.jobs, alt.politics.media   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns   
   From: biden.pedos@angi.com   
      
   The Morlock  wrote in   
   news:XnsABB8DEA33560Forlock@178.63.61.145:   
      
   > Biden is a lying sack of shit.   
      
   US payroll growth in the year through March may have been weaker than   
   previously reported — to the tune of 500,000 jobs — resulting in less-   
   robust numbers that could make the Fed think twice about further rate   
   hikes, according to a report.   
      
   Last year, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics employment reports repeatedly   
   shocked economists with larger-than-expected payroll gains that saw over   
   10 million job openings for 20 straight months — a record-breaking streak   
   that ended in January and a key reason behind the Federal Reserve’s   
   continued interest rate hikes.   
      
   However, Daniel Silver, an economist at JPMorgan Chase, estimates that   
   when the federal agency’s preliminary benchmark revision is released on   
   Wednesday, it will be nearly half a million off from the level of total   
   employment reported in the year through March, according to a report   
   shared with The Post.   
      
   If Silver is correct, that would mean there are 40,000 fewer jobs per   
   month over the 12-month period ended in March than the BLS originally   
   reported.   
      
   It’s typical for the BLS to revise its past jobs reports. Typically, with   
   every month of fresh payroll data, the agency looks back at the two   
   previous months and edits its database accordingly.   
      
   In its latest July jobs report — when hiring cooled to its lowest level   
   since 2020 — the BLS revised May by 25,000, meaning it’s more likely that   
   281,000 jobs were added to the US economy that month rather than the   
   306,000 originally reported.   
      
   The BLS also benchmarks March payroll data in a more accurate report that   
   covers nonfarm employment called the Quarterly Census of Employment and   
   Wages (QCEW), which is based on state unemployment insurance tax records.   
      
   Once March payroll figures are established, the change is proportionally   
   distributed across the prior 12 months.   
      
   The BLS’ first-quarter QCEW report will be released on Wednesday.   
      
   Despite expectations that the QCEW will show weaker payroll growth   
   figures, Silver said in his report that “the revised average monthly rate   
   of job growth would still look strong over the year through March 2023, at   
   around 300,000.”   
      
   The figure, Silver noted, “would be trimmed down from the 337,000 average   
   pace currently shown in the BLS data.”   
      
   Standard Charter Bank analyst Steven Englander estimates that the downward   
   revision could be even worse than Silver predicts, at around 650,000,   
   according to Bloomberg.   
      
   That would indicate “a much weaker labor market profile” than what guided   
   Fed tightening in recent quarters, Englander told the outlet. “This would   
   reduce the pressure for further hikes.”   
      
   Bloomberg Economics’ Stuart Paul also believes the QCEW data will be   
   weaker than recent headlines suggest.   
      
   “People who have been outright saying ‘the labor market is tight’ might be   
   in for a shock,” he told Bloomberg.   
      
   It’s the US job market’s supposed resilience that has played an important   
   role in the Fed’s decision to hike interest rates to a 22-year high last   
   month, increasing the benchmark federal-funds rate to a range between   
   5.25% and 5.5% in an effort to bring inflation back down to its pre-   
   pandemic level of 2%.   
      
   Fed officials have warned that strong hiring can often fuel inflation if   
   companies feel compelled to raise pay to attract and keep workers.   
      
   Thus, a slowdown in job growth and pay raises could help the Fed reach its   
   2% inflation target.   
      
   When The Post sought comment from the BLS, a spokesperson declined to   
   comment on estimates, adding that they can only “answer questions about   
   published BLS data.”   
      
   https://nypost.com/2023/08/22/us-payroll-may-lose-500000-jobs-in-us-   
   government-data-revision/   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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