Readers want to know why I have not reported on the payroll jobs
statistics for the past two months. Does this mean, they ask, that the
situation has turned around and that the U.S. economy is again creating jobs in export and import-competitive sectors?
Alas, no. I did not write about the past two payroll jobs data
reports because it is the same distressing story that other readers say they
are bored with hearing.
The July report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics lists
113,000 new jobs, all of which are in services.
"Leisure and hospitality" accounted for 42,000 jobs, most of
which are waitresses and bartenders.
"Education and health services" accounted for 24,000 jobs.
"Professional and business services" accounted for 43,000.
Manufacturing lost another 15,000 jobs.
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In the United States today, government employs 7.7 million more
people than does manufacturing. Little wonder we have an $800 billion annual
trade deficit, when the government sector is larger than the manufacturing
sector.
American economists are yet to face up to the fact that
offshoring high-productivity, high-value-added jobs that pay well and
replacing them with waitresses and bartenders is a knife in the heart of the
U.S. economy. Charles W. McMillion of MBG Information Services reports that
compensation is falling behind price rises and that the U.S. economy has
been kept afloat by consumers overspending their disposable incomes by
drawing down their accumulated assets and going deeper into debt.
McMillion reports that according to the Bureau of Economic
Affairs, households outspent their disposable incomes by 1.5 percent in the
second quarter of this year, a rate of dissaving equaled only by the
depression year of 1933.
McMillion also reports that recent BLS data indicates that 25
states have lost manufacturing jobs year over year and that 25 states have
lost jobs in the information sector.
Little wonder that permits for new private housing are down 20.5
percent year over year and that new housing starts are down 13.3 percent
year over year. What will we do with the millions of illegal Mexicans when
construction jobs dry up?
Wage data covering 82 percent of all private sector jobs show
that the purchasing power of weekly wages today is less than it was when the
economic recovery began in November 2001. What kind of economic recovery is
it when the purchasing power of wages falls instead of rises?
In my opinion, the recovery was artificial. It was based on
extremely low interest rates orchestrated by the Federal Reserve. The low
interest rates discouraged saving, reduced the mortgage cost of real estate,
inflated home prices, and encouraged consumers to refinance their homes and
spend the equity.
The federal government also has been overspending its income and
has wasted a minimum of $300 billion on an illegal, pointless and lost war
that has turned Iraq into a terror zone.
It is unclear how much longer the world will trade Americans
real goods for pieces of paper that the U.S. economy cannot redeem with
tradable goods and services.
Considering the loss of good jobs, the high debt burden and the
dependence on imports, it is unclear what will enable America to pull
herself out of the next recession.
Perhaps growing ranks of the unemployed will become cannon
fodder for Bush's wars in the Middle East.