5% Unemployment Is For Dummies

 | Jun 05, 2016 06:44AM ET

Full employment is widely accepted to be the point where the non-employed worker pool has declined as far as it can without fueling inflation.

Follow up:

I have enjoyed listening to the pundits respond to Donald Trump's unemployment assertions last week.

We have tremendous deficits. Don't believe the 5 percent. The real [unemployment] number is 20 percent.

I do not believe the real unemployment is 5%. This is opinion because the data gathering methods are flawed, real hard data is literally non-existent, and the existing Current Population Survey plainly asks the wrong questions to determine if someone is in the workforce. [One cannot be counted as unemployed if they are not in the workforce]

  1. Do you currently want a job, either full or part time?
  2. What is the main reason you were not looking for work during the last 4 weeks?
  3. Did you look for work at any time during the last 12 months?
  4. Last week, could you have started a job if one had been offered?

To me, you should simply ask people who do not have a job if they would work if a good job was offered. This way you potentially better understand employment slack (although this is not perfect either). It is very important for organizations (say the Federal Reserve or other government organizations) to correctly access employment slack.

From the meager data published, I continue to focus on the 25 to 54 age group which is the backbone of the USA labor force. The last time this group was the same size as today - which happens to be in January 2000 - the unemployment rate for this segment was 3.1 then, and it is 5.6 now. This equates to 2.5 million workers who are not working - and are likely available for work. At the current rate of employment growth of this group, it would take 2 years to employ 2.5 million 25 to 54 workers.