Friday, February 3, 2012

Rick Santelli Talks Shrinkage... And Today's Jobs Numbers

Rick Santelli reported the fact that 1.2 million people dropped out of the labor force in one month. Just because the unemployment rate drops doesn't necessarily mean that the economy is getting better. Definitely not at the pace that this administration portrays.  The rest of the Obama media continues to hide the real numbers behind the unemployment rate.


H/T Gateway Pundit 
The labor participation rate has not been this low since 1983.



4 comments:

Amusing Bunni said...

Like everything else, these "good news" labor numbers are a big lie. The "recovery" is slower than anything. Once again, obummer is try ing to grab credit for it.
It's still very hard to find any sort of a job out there.

Opinionated Me said...

The January unemployment numbers were GOOD? The best jobs report we have had in three years?
January Unemployment Rate Falls to 8.3 Percent as 243,000 Jobs Are Added? Yeah, that really sounds like a good report, but it ain't so!.
Well here's an explanation that maybe even most brain-dead Obama worshipers can understand, ( I said maybe)!
OK, here we go..
by John Crudele. New York Post,
Everyone, of course, would be thrilled if 243,000 jobs were actually created in the month of January. Hallelujah!

Remember, we are talking about the month when companies go into hibernation because of bad weather and temporary Christmas jobs end. Jobs aren’t created in January. They are lost.
Yet there it is in the Labor Department release yesterday — total non-farm payrolls rose by 243,000 in January and the unemployment rate decreased to 8.3 percent.
A lie? Political manipulation? Or maybe it’s just that most people don’t understand what they’re looking at. The answer is the latter.
Those 243,000 jobs are the total after seasonal adjustments.
The question you should be asking is, what’s the un-tampered-with number before the adjustment?
Glad you asked. The Labor Department reported a loss of 2,689,000 jobs in January.
Seasonal adjustments are intended to smooth out holiday bumps like that. But because of the depth and unusual nature of the nation’s Great Recession, those seasonal adjustments are being skewed.
Here’s how it works: In January 2010, as I said, there was an actual, unadjusted job loss of 2,858,000 jobs.
To make it simple, the government computers were expecting a bigger unadjusted loss than the 2,689,000 jobs because last January’s decline was 2,858,000.
Why weren’t there as many job losses this January? Very likely because the weather throughout the country is a lot milder this year than during the past two January's.
A loss of jobs that isn’t as bad as expected turns into a job gain. Does that mean there really are 243,000 new jobs out there? Absolutely not.
Let’s say there are rumors in your company that 300 people are going to be laid off. Instead, management decides to fire just 200.
Two hundred people, of course, have lost their jobs. But, adjusting it for expectations, 100 people didn’t get fired. Using this analogy, the government would say that, on an expectation-adjusted basis, 100 jobs were created.
That’s sort of what happened in the January employment report because of seasonal adjustment.
The numbers themselves shouldn’t be changed because continuity from year to year is important for comparisons. But people should be alerted when seasonal adjustments are screwing with the numbers.
Someday maybe the Obama administration will tell the truth! Yeah, someday, maybe even in our lifetime. But I doubt it.. Or when hell freezes over.

Woodsterman (Odie) said...

Oh, we'll just stop counting a few million people ... new math.

Anonymous said...

The ministry of truth has done an amazing job with these numbers.