MinnEcon

MinnEcon: July 30, 2010 Archive

How's that job search going? Not great?

Posted at 3:00 PM on July 30, 2010 by Paul Tosto (0 Comments)
Filed under: Jobs & unemployment

Seems like each time we write a story about a Minnesotan finding work , we're confronted with a batch of worrisome data and stories of struggle.

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for minnecon.smallicon.gif

That's the case today. New data shows the national economy hobbling along -- growing, but not at a pace that will trigger the burst of new job growth we've been expecting.

Sources in our Public Insight Network have been reminding us that a recovery without jobs isn't much of a recovery.

While things are looking up for people with work, it's a continual battle for the jobless, one that will worsen as unemployment benefits and other aid expire.

"The odds are horrible," said Pam Pommer, a Network source from Bloomington, one of more than 20 Network sources who checked in with us on their job search and told us what it's like out there.

"I applied for an office job at the city of Bloomington and there were about 300 other applicants, and we were first screened by a 100-question, multiple choice test," Pommer told us. "The pay being offered by many jobs is horrible and online applications and responses keep the process so impersonal."

She's been able to keep health coverage in the recession by the federal COBRA subsidy . "That has been a lifesaver for me. But that will run out in a couple of months."

Click on the map icons below to read what Pommer and others in our Network told us about the job market when we asked, "How's it going?"

Unemployment-wise, Minnesota's doing better than the nation. But that's no comfort to those who cannot find steady work. The new federal unemployment benefits extension won't help some long-term jobless folks and it seems to be creating more confusion.

"The 'extension,' only secures the transition from one tier to the next for those who have not yet exhausted the three tiers and the extended benefit (or fourth tier) of unemployment benefits. I'm in the fourth tier - and when the fourth tier expires, so do my benefits," said Kristine Holmgren, a Network source from Minneapolis.

"So I'm good for about four more weeks and then the ceiling falls in on me -- as it already has on millions of other Americans."

The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis offers a telling graphic on how lame the jobs rebound is in this recession compared to others. Here's their look at changes in Minnesota unemployment in this recession compared to others.

The (appropriately) gray line shows just how how much the job market has tanked in this recession compared to downturns past. I still believe the 80 and 81 recessions were worse. But as this recovery limps along, I'm less convinced.

Keith Nelson told us his graphics career took a hit in the recession and hasn't come back.

"I have found occasional short stints, but nothing lasting more than a few weeks," said Nelson, a Network source from Minneapolis.

As I have now totally exhausted my unemployment funds, the lack of any predictable income is causing me a lot of stress...it has been a rare occurrence that I even get a notice that a position has been filled by someone else when the job is in the graphics field.

Basically, he said, it's "very much like throwing applications down a black hole. The job market is so dry that it is hard to convince myself to even try."

*****************************************
What are you seeing in the Minnesota job market? Post something below or contact us directly at MinnEcon.

Comment on this post

Deflation risk?

Posted at 9:42 AM on July 30, 2010 by Chris Farrell (2 Comments)
Filed under: Economic Lookouts

Chris Farrell From chief economics correspondent Chris Farrell

Ugh. (That's a highly technical economic term). The U.S. economy expanded at a muted pace during the second quarter of the 2010. Government statisticians calculate that the economy expanded at a mere 2.4 percent annual rate. They also figured that the recession--the deepest and longest since the 1930s--was even worse than earlier believed. The economic news is definitely disappointing. Yes, it's good that the economy continues to expand and, when looking more closely at the data, that business investment is soaring. But it's tough to see the job market improving anytime soon.

But here's what has grabbed my attention, and worry. The GDP report will stoke growing alarms over the rising risk of deflation. The price condition we're far more used to is inflation or an increase in the overall price level. Deflation is a decline in the overall price level. Deflation is an unfamiliar, unsettling bogeyman--with good reason. America's most notorious episode of deflation was also its last--the Great Depression. There was a brief, but largely forgotten, episode in 1955 and another one in 2003.

Of course, many economists and investors still worry about high and rising inflation in the future. Not now, but perhaps in a year or two. Their fear is that inflation will inevitably follow the enormous efforts Washington made to stave off a depression over the past two years. Nevertheless, the inflation rate keeps going lower.

For instance, the GDP report has the core rate of inflation--which excludes volatile moves in food and energy prices--increasing by 1.1% in the April-to-June period from the previous quarter. That's slightly below the 1.2% reading in the first three months of the year. Other major measures of inflation reinforce the picture of little to no price pressure. The 12-month change in the core Consumer Price index is 0.9 percent. It has been below 1 percent for the past three months. (Economists treat the core rate as the underlying trend rate of inflation.)

fredgraphcoreCPI.png

The inflation rate predicted by 10-year Treasury Inflation Protected Securities is only 1.4 percent. Of course, investors can be wrong--really wrong. But I find it intriguing that investors aren't that concerned that the Fed is printing money.

St. Louis Fed President James Bullard recently released a new research paper--Seven Faces of Peril--that the U.S. faces the real risk of a Japanese-style deflationary period. Here's an article from the American Magazine concerned about deflation, too.

What's the big deal with changes in the overall price level? Not much if the price changes are modest. But history shows that the economy breaking down when trust in money deteriorates. In a sense, the inflation rate and the deflation rate is a barometer of the economic and social health of a nation. Both are bad at the extremes. The historic record is clear: hyper-deflation, say a 1930s deflation rate of 5% to 10%, is ruinous. Period.

The record is mixed, however, when it comes to mild deflation, say a rate of 1% to 2% a year. Sometimes, mild deflation signals a weak economy that limps along, always vulnerable to bad news. Think Japan. However, it can also signal a vigorous, healthy economy. Think late 19th century America.

In other words, what matters is why are overall prices persistently falling. It's a topic I wrote a book about several years ago.

9780061539855.jpg

Here's my take: The global economy is undergoing a remarkable structural transformation of a kind that occurs once every century or two. The world is shifting from an era of structural inflation to one of underlying deflation. The combination of technological innovation, freer trade, out-sourcing, central bankers worldwide dedicated to fighting inflation, a more mature international monetary system, and all the rest act as a brake on price increases.

And this is why I'm so concerned about the recent trend in prices. The underlying price trend is deflationary and now, on top of that, is the downward momentum unleashed by the Great Recession and anemic recovery. St. Louis president Bullard is right: The Fed and other central bankers had better start worrying about falling prices and taking bold steps to combat it.

Comment on this post

July 2010
S M T W T F S
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31


Master Archive

MPR News
Radio

Listen Now

Other Radio Streams from MPR

Classical MPR
Radio Heartland

Services