Employment Still Strong But the U.S. Economy Is Finally Downshifting

Chief Economist Eugenio J. Alemán discusses current economic conditions.

The relative weakness in July’s nonfarm payroll employment number and the increase in the rate of unemployment from 4.1% in June to 4.3% in July, triggering the Sahm Rule is a reminder of the difficult tasks ahead for the Federal Reserve (Fed). We are going to give Fed officials the ‘benefit of the doubt’ in that it did not have advanced notice of the employment numbers we were going to get two days after the decision to keep interest rates unchanged in July.

Again, even if the Sahm Rule has been triggered, we agree with the author of the Sahm Rule, that this time is different. And it is different not only for the Sahm Rule but also for a plethora of other economic indicators, starting with the yield curve, which has been inverted for more than two years, to the Leading Economic Indicator, which had been pointing to a recession for more than two years, to the ISM, manufacturing as well as services, which have been pointing to economic weakness, to household employment, which has been signaling weakness for a long time compared to the still relatively strong nonfarm employment numbers, etc.

It is clear that the pandemic recession messed up every economic indicator that economists used to use to get a feel for economic activity. And, the normalization process for these indicators will continue to take time just because the pandemic completely destroyed typical trends and patterns we used to hold true. We do not blame those who are in charge of the calculations and data processing, both federal, state, and local officials as well as those private organizations that provide timely indicators because they are doing the best they can. However, this increases the importance of interpreting data and looking at more non-traditional data, as Raymond James Chief Investment Officer Larry Adam indicated clearly during the Raymond James Summer Development Conference in Orlando in mid-July.

It is also important to remind everybody that although the nonfarm payroll number in July was much lower than expected, 114,000 jobs created is still a relatively strong number for the U.S. economy which, on average, creates about 125,000 per month.

Nonfarm Payrolls